The whole Internet is in the process of dividing between a strictly controlled, monetized/verified corporate network and a non-monetized free network, each of which may eventually be unable to talk to the other. Now is the time to decide which side of that divide you want to be on. It has already begun.
On the free side, activist email server Riseup's users had years of trouble with the corporate email servers rejecting their emails because the Spamhaus project became politicized and repeatedly listed them falsely as spam. This will spread, I expect that ad-supported email will talk only to itself at some point in the future, so there will effectively be two totally separate email systems. I will be blind to the corporate side of this as I am to what happens on Facebook. Yahoo has been caught blocking email access to people who block ads. Expect that to become the industry standard and to have to close all accounts with all ad-supported services within the next few years. There are hacks to defeat that bur such an account is endangered and should be emptied and closed ideally within a single login session, as I did when Hotmail demanded phone verification years ago and I had to break into my own account by using a cut and pasted URL I have not yet had trouble with Hushmail and mailing lists, though setting up new free Hushmail accounts now requires using one of the web services that emulates a phone taking SMS messages to defeat SMS verification. My acount will be abandoned without notice if they demand this on existing accounts and find a way around the web service workaround, as I refuse to permit any online activity involving me to be "verified." At that point I will probably have to set up a personal email server. My aggressive adblocking, tracker blocking, and rejection of verification are not welcome among corporate providers. On 3/4/2016 at 3:05 PM, "Ralf Mardorf" <ralf.mard...@alice-dsl.net> wrote: > >On Fri, 4 Mar 2016 14:13:32 -0500, WMID wrote: >>I would like to be a member. > >I don't want to join any club, but I want to have an email address >that >works with most mailing lists :D. > >I don't have the link at hand, but yahoo (and rocketmail, which >actually >is yahoo) already are a PITA, completely unusable or at best usable >with hard restrictions. All much used free addresses, G-spot or >what >ever they are named and so on, will follow a new policy soon, that >unfortunately completely screws up mailman. If I have more time >I'll >sent you the Arch Linux mailing list threads regarding this issue. > >Many other providers, that don't follow that new policy, OTOH are >much >too often blackhole listed, such as Alice and all the US-American >companies around AOL. > >Currently I have got best experiences with zoho.com, but I suspect >it's >just a matter of time when this provider becomes unusable too. > >It's not that easy to find a provider that can be used with mailing >lists nowadays. > >Any hints are welcome. > >Regards, >Ralf > >PS: > >Let alone that my MUA's filters don't work properly anymore, since >I've >got to change email addresses all the times. I fear that mailing >lists >will die soon. > >-- >ubuntu-studio-devel mailing list >ubuntu-studio-devel@lists.ubuntu.com >Modify settings or unsubscribe at: >https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-devel -- ubuntu-studio-devel mailing list ubuntu-studio-devel@lists.ubuntu.com Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-devel