(I haven't run my own mail-server in a while. It's getting harder and harder.)
Are the real-time-blackhole lists still a thing?
If they're regularly allowing spam and not responding to reports in any sort of timely manner, possibly they should be reported to those.
Not going to work though, is it. Too big to fail shouldn't be a thing. It's not like you can't be flexible about it or give them some room to deal with it within corporate policy; but they do need to deal with it, right?
Realistically, I think some companies have outgrown the size where internet can still self-regulate them. You'd hurt yourself more than gmail.
This either needs laws or new game theory.
Or -you know- deprecate the current email system. I know that's a perennial proposal; but that's because every year it gets even more broken in even more interesting ways. It's patch-on-patch-on-patch at the moment. Just spinning up sendmail on a random box won't quite cut it anymore, if you want to participate.
Are the real-time-blackhole lists still a thing?
If they're regularly allowing spam and not responding to reports in any sort of timely manner, possibly they should be reported to those.
Not going to work though, is it. Too big to fail shouldn't be a thing. It's not like you can't be flexible about it or give them some room to deal with it within corporate policy; but they do need to deal with it, right?
Realistically, I think some companies have outgrown the size where internet can still self-regulate them. You'd hurt yourself more than gmail.
This either needs laws or new game theory.
Or -you know- deprecate the current email system. I know that's a perennial proposal; but that's because every year it gets even more broken in even more interesting ways. It's patch-on-patch-on-patch at the moment. Just spinning up sendmail on a random box won't quite cut it anymore, if you want to participate.