Agree w/ Daniel in all ways. We want our events to succeed, no? So we use marketing techniques to do so. Emails and so on. And we track who opens them so we can get better at marketing. Like any other business trying to succeed. Mail chimp is currently convenient, in the past other technologies were convenient (I spammed people in 2007 using a custom perl script, because I am a God Among Men), in the future different technologies will be convenient. But they are all going towards making a good event.
Naturally the first targets of marketing the event will be people who have attended past events under the same/similar umbrella. I provided the 2007 attendance list to foss4g events for a number of years until it had grown entirely stale. I felt good about it. I revelled in the goodness of it. I have spammed. I will spam again, in the service of a good cause. That is my weakness. That is my strength. P. On Wed, Dec 16, 2015 at 7:20 AM, Daniel Morissette <dmorisse...@mapgears.com> wrote: > On 2015-12-16 10:00 AM, Venkatesh Raghavan wrote: >> >> On 2015/12/16 18:37, Pat Tressel wrote: >>> >>> MailChimp is a very popular product. If you have a provable accusation >>> against them -- that they were acting **independently of the account >>> administrator** to alter lists, then that would be significant. As Rob >>> has stated, MailChimp did not do something by itself. The list was >>> aggregated from previous lists and events in which people participated. >> >> >> I have also received a similar unsolicited mail. I would like to know >> who has authorized >> the aggregation and usage of email address from "previous lists and >> events in which >> people participated". I think every event has a privacy policy and >> e-mail address provided >> are only to be used for communicating about the specific event and not >> for aggregating for >> future use. >> > > > For the record, the use of such mailing services for FOSS4G promotion is not > new. Even FOSS4G 2015 (Seoul) used MailChimp in a very similar way, I still > have some of their mails in my archives, and I'm sure other past events did > as well but I didn't bother digging any further. > > How can you realistically expect to do outreach to new people if you only > announce your event on osgeo-discuss? > > This anti-anything-locationtech-does drama is becoming boring, please let's > get over it. > > -- > Daniel Morissette > http://www.mapgears.com/ > T: +1 418-696-5056 #201 > > http://evouala.com/ - Location Intelligence Made Easy > > _______________________________________________ > Discuss mailing list > Discuss@lists.osgeo.org > http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss _______________________________________________ Discuss mailing list Discuss@lists.osgeo.org http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss