It appears that Michael Irvine via mailop <m...@greatsys.com> said: >I can't say the specific lenders, but I can say that it is not just bank and >money lending. We have clients who are from the courts and other 3rd parties >that do >not fully validate the email that is given to them. We still must take it as >there are no good ways to get the correct known email for a person.
Speaking as a very small mail provider, and as someone who gets a great deal of mail for people who imagine that my address is their address, I do not care whether your mail is delivered. A lot of the addresses are wrong, and the debt collection business is so sleazy that even if the addresses are right, the debts often are not (and getting a court to approve it is no guarantee.) As someone else said, if you want to get the message delivered, send a physical paper letter. If it's not worth spending a dollar to send the notice, it must not be much of a debt. R's, John _______________________________________________ mailop mailing list mailop@mailop.org https://list.mailop.org/listinfo/mailop