Isn't this DMARC issue a bellwether for the end of email lists as we know them? 
 It seems to me that the means of production (the internet backbone, the mail 
servers, etc) are now owned by Big Media (Comcast, Walt Disney, CBS, Viacom, 
Time Warner) and it is in their interest to make sure they can sell as much 
advertising as possible to the cattle. 

People who operate Mailman servers (you guys) are just the little guys who are 
helping people facilitate non-advertisable communication between the masses.

This seems like a poignant example of the fiction of the distributed network. 
The last 15 years of the internet history (indeed, the first 15 years of 
internet history) has been the story of the consolidation of control into the 
hands of the few, not the open and egalitarian peer-to-peer network utopia that 
the internet was touted to be in populist culture.

If I really have something to say to someone, I write it using ink and paper, 
put it in an envelope, put a stamp on it and drop it into an actual post box. 
This way I know the NSA can't see it. 

-Jason
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