I very much appreciate you, Michael, taking part in the discussions on
this list and giving us some hints on what the issues are.

Microsoft could (unfortunately) easily ignore every inquiry from small
mail providers and it won't affect them, so... thanks for not ignoring ;-)

My hint to german law wasn't meant to offend anyone and of course this
doesn't apply for every other country - i just wanted to provide
information on the local situation.

The intention of this part of the law is to ensure people can trust
communication providers like snail mail and e-mail.

Of course, some exceptions (like discarding virusses) are allowed,
although many still inform the recipient that a mail has been discarded
or quarantined because of a detected virus.

Andreas


Am 09.06.2016 um 15:44 schrieb Michael Wise via mailop:
> 
> These are hard issues to discuss, and I hope the view I present of how
> certain issues are viewed from behind the trenches of a large scale mail
> service are useful.
> 
> Sometimes, what scales and what doesn't are not obvious. But the comment
> on German law in particular is interesting, and ... Will not go un-noticed.
> 
> I am not a fan of Silent Drop, and continue to push for some other
> infrastructure and user friendly solution, but so far... It's a hard
> sell for many reasons.
> 
> Aloha,
> Michael.
> -- 
> Sent from my Windows Phone
> 
> 
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> 

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