Main arguments made thus far and my retorts.

A1: Any one who tries to work on anti-spam is a "Kook".
R1: Illogical

A2: Too difficult for legitimate bulk senders to implement and support, and 
"especially" mailing lists.
R2: Many, if not most, mailing lists are already provided in "pull" www format.  Since 
they already implemented the complexity to pump incoming emails into www, it is 
trivial in comparison to cc: a copy to a POP account.  A simple .procmail script could 
be written in 5 minutes.

A3: Spammers will use mailing lists to send.
R3: They already do.  Receivers can opt out of mailing lists (before and after my 
proposal).  Without my proposal, they can opt-out of all bulk email, which includes 
spam and legitimate bulk email, and they can selectively whitelist to opt-in (I showed 
how this whitelisting can be spoofed by a spammer).  With my proposal, they can 
additionally opt-out out all spam == which is now all bulk email, and selectively 
opt-in (via "pull") to mailing lists (which is a concurrent operation with 
subscribing, not a separate subvertable whitelist).  With my proposal, receivers will 
get less spam, because their email address is only selectively opted-in, instead of 
open to all spammers.  Additionally, with the inherent "pull" delay, mailing lists can 
effectively remove spam from the "pull" server as it is discovered, well before most 
receivers "pull" it.  Additionally, mailing lists already have mechanisms in place to 
defeat incoming spam and will be developing more, given their advantage of requiring 
membership (subscription).  So all in all, under my proposal spammers will be less 
successful.

A4: Status quo is better risk.
R4: Timeline curves project spam will keep increasing and eventually most email will 
be spam.  Unless effective filters can be done and maintained with the status quo 
paradigm, you will eventually have 1 legitimate email for every 10s or 100s of spams.  
I know people who have this scenario already.  At that point, the legitimate bulk 
email isn't getting read whether it is filtered actively or inherently (burried in 
spam).  Without my proposal and with this eventual outcome, receivers will be forced 
to use "pull" for mailing lists (e.g. www archives) while their general email remains 
broke.  If you think current filters are effective, then why are so many receivers 
complaining about spam?  I know there are filters which work somewhat, but either 
their cost model can apparently not scale to all receivers (e.g. BrightMail because 
they use humans to help filter), or the filter can be subverted with varying content 
or whitelist mining (e.g. DCC), or the filter can be subverted by adapting Bayesian 
footprint, or the filter can be subverted by whitelist mining and filter causes big 
delays in legit email (e.g. email-back whitelisting verification), etc...  The point 
is legitimate bulk email is going to end "pull" whether by design or by failure of 
general email.  I prefer by design.

A5: Receivers will not "pull" legitimate bulk email
R5: They will if there is no other way to get their email.  See R4 above.  By design 
or by failure of general email, the problem is going to collapse either way into 
"pull"ing legitimate bulk email.  I prefer by design.

A6: POP is not ubiqutous enough.
R6: Use any and as many "pull" protocols as you want to serve your readers.  I'd say 
POP and www are sufficient, but use as many as your receivers want.  Let your market 
decide what you provide.

A7: Some people in this list are against because they have vested interest in status 
quo for mailing lists
R7: Without logical basis on the internet as a whole (this is IETF), that would not be 
a sound engineering basis to stifle an idea.

A8: Usenet already exists
R8: Use Usenet to provide pull if that is what your receivers want.  I think most 
would prefer to send and recieve in their email client, so I think POP would be more 
popular.

A9: Separating legitimate bulk email into "pull" will not cause additional enforcement 
against remaining spam == all bulk email
R9: There is going to be continuing increase in enforcement whether you implement my 
proposal or not.  Either active enforcement or inherent (lost in pile of spam).  There 
is a fundamental science to this.  It is called information theory and one of the 
theorems is that as you increase noise, then unless you can filter the noise, 
receiving original signal becomes less reliable.  The response rate of spam at < 1% 
(figure I've seen is usually < 0.003%) means it is noise.  Reading (receiving) of all 
email will get more and more unreliable, as spam increases.  Just imagine the 
bandwidth it will take to download it, store it, process it, not to mention try to 
filter and read it.  Spammers will get more and more savvy at subverting filters, as 
filters become more and more successful and popular.  Spammers will increase spam, the 
more that filtering increases.  It is a race to the saturation point where no 
information can be sent reliably via email.  With my proposal, at least active 
enforcement can go after all bulk email without having to worry about also killing 
legitimate bulk email.  And with my proposal, at least receivers can receive their 
legitimate bulk email with reduced spam (see R3) and can "pull" it without wading thru 
all spam incoming on a "push" email account (again see R3).  And with my proposal, at 
least receivers know that someone is spamming them, and not honoring their request for 
"pull" (opt-in).  There are many other benefits...

A10: Separating legitimate bulk email into "pull" does not separate it from spam
R10: See R3

Did I miss any relevant arguments made thus far in this thread?

Shelby Moore
http://AntiViotic.com


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