Industry News

News from the Email Marketing and deliverability Industry as well as news on trends on email use.

Microsoft/Hotmail to support Goodmail Certified Mail?

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Whilst browsing the web for email deliverability related stories that may have broken in the time it took me to drive from work to home I came across an article published only a few minutes ago. The article published on the deliverability.com site claims that today goodmail have announced that Microsoft mailboxes would soon support the goodmail certified mail programme run by Goodmail systems.

If this is true then Goodmail have just added the worlds largest consumer mailbox provider to their list of ISP partners which already boasts Yahoo!, AOL, MySpace and large US ISPs such as Comcast and Cox.net.

Email Manual have been unable to verify the rumour and has not seen any communication from either goodmail nor Microsoft to be able to confirm the claim and at time of writing this there is no mention of it on the Goodmail systems press release page.

That being said, Hotmail/live/Microsoft mailboxes which are rumoured to be around 270 million in volume  would be a huge boost for the company which operates a certified mail scheme which can be optionally subscribed to through ESP’s who are partnered with goodmail.

The scheme which charges ESPs an additional CPM rate for mail destined for goodmail supported inboxes to allow their customers to particpiate claims to have delivered 30-40% better ROI and clickthrough rates for some customers. A customer must be able to demonstrate an existing good deliverability and low spam complaint rate to participate.

The goodmail scheme works slightly differently with different ISPs but can offer some or all of the following benefits:

  • Guaranteed to hit the inbox rather than the junk folder
  • Images and links turned on by default within the email client.
  • A blue certified mail envelope next to the email in the inbox to assure recipients the email is genuine.

For more information contact your email service provider.

US Government Departments and the Freedom of Access Act, Where is the protection for the subscriber?

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Those of us who work in the email marketing industry are very familiar with the dreaded CAN-SPAM act. Those of us who deal with some of the less experienced email marketers on a daily basis also know how frustrating it is when a marketer justifies their latest ‘blast’ as being “CAN-SPAM compliant”.

The CAN-SPAM act is Americas answer to anti-spam legislation and in a nut shell specifies that emails sent to consumers should allow subscribers to “opt out” of receiving further emails from the same organisation e.g the minimum requirement to email an individual is that an unsubscribe link must be provided and the name and address of the sending party should be readily available to the recipient.

Many other parts of the developed world instead specify that a consumer must “opt in” to receive marketing material for an organisation. In the “opt in” example the consumer knowingly and intentionally subscribes to a specific list/organisation for marketing materials before the marketing commences. Permission to send bulk email to the consumer does not extend beyond that organisation unless explicitly specified within the privacy policy and often through the addition of a separate check box.

The problem with the CAN-SPAM legislation is that it allows companies to relentlessly spam a consumer until they opt-out and is considered very bad practice among more experienced email marketers who are after a long, sustainable 1-1 relationship with their subscriber base.

In addition to the contribution the USA have made to the email marketing industry in the form of this CAN-SPAM legislation, one of the American Attorney General’s offices in Maine last month went one level further by forcing a Government organisation, the Maine Fisheries & Wildlife Department to disclose its list of email subscribers to a private sector organisation for free under the Freedom of Access Act.

The email address list owned by the Maine department for Fisheries and Wildlife had been collected online when residents or visitors to the state of Maine made applications for permits to hunt or fish within the state and to register boats, snowmobiles and ATVs.

These users gave their email addresses for communication in relation to these applications and some in addition also chose to receive the departments periodic informational emails and was therefore in keeping with good practice by being an entirely opt-in list.

When an individual approached the department for fisheries and wildlife and asked for the list data, the department originally declined to provide the list stating that the list was not a public record and therefore not subject to a Freedom of Access act. The individual then appealed this decision through the Attorney Generals office who overruled the decision. By doing so the Attorney Generals office agreed for this list to be given to a 3rd party who would under the CAN-SPAM act be free to email this data and therefore turn this list into an opt-out based list.

The organisation represented by the individual making the access request was the “Sportsman’s Alliance of Maine” whose objective is to promote conservation of Maine’s wildlife resources and to be an advocate for hunters, anglers, trappers and gun owners throughout the state.

The sportsmans alliance (SAM) openly publish via their updates page on their website that “The SAM Board has approved a membership recruitment and retention plan for FY 10 that outlines the methods we’ll use to recruit new members and retain current members.” and that during 2010 “we will aggressively market SAM life memberships and offer payment plans that will allow members to achieve life status over a period of two to four years.”

Although the work that the sportsmans alliance does sounds relevant and targeted towards the type of people who would have been on department of fisheries and wildlifes list, the issue still remains that the people who will receive emails from the Sportsman’s alliance will have not signed up to receive this type of email and there is nothing legally which prevents the Alliance from selling or renting this list to other organisations.

On one hand, you have to acknowledge that the Sportsmans Alliance has clearly spotted an opportunity, and one that has ultimately been recognized as legal within the state of Maine. They are now able to grow their organisation through marketing records (circa 100k of them) which resulted from a freedom of access request, however on the other hand this sets a dangerous precedent. The precedent that organisations that exist purely for profit may also be able to benefit from this type of freedom of access request not just within Maine and not just from the fisheries and wildlife department but potentially all over America and from all Government departments, where is the protection for the subscriber?

Let us know your thoughts using the comments box below.

For more information on this Freedom of access request please see the following press release from the Maine department of Fisheries and Wildlife.

http://www.maine.gov/ifw/notices/emailList.pdf

Yahoo.co.uk mail servers offline.

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Yahoo’s mail servers which handle email for yahoo.co.uk (and possibly other EU domain suffixes) appear to have gone offline a couple of hours ago.

There is no word from yahoo! on the cause or whether the outage is planned or not but ESP’s and bulk mailers should be aware that you will likely build up large queues on your MTA’s and these should be monitored. This is not an issue with your deliverability but instead an outage.

The following servers are affected:

yahoo.co.uk.            449     IN      MX      10 mx2.mail.eu.yahoo.com. – 77.238.177.142
yahoo.co.uk.            449     IN      MX      10 mx1.mail.eu.yahoo.com. – 217.12.11.35

We will update this post again when the servers return.

SURBL Announce new experimental URL based blocklist

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On Thursday, the team behind the SURBL domain blacklists announced a new, experimental blacklist: xs.surbl.org.

As announced on the SURBL-Announce list: “An experimental source of some snowshoe and pill domains is now being published in xs.surbl.org.  SURBL considers this feed to be experimental and would very much welcome feedback about it, particularly about any false positives.  Does anyone know anyone who actually wants to receive snowshoe messages?”

You can read the entire announcement here.

So what’s different about this blacklist/blocklist?

Most blacklists or blocklists are IP based, e.g they contain a list of computers and servers which have sent spam in the past. However because of the increased use of botnets (compromised computers) to send spam SURBL have for a while now maintained a list of websites advertised within spam messages. This allows mail administrators to add another useful tool to their content filtering e.g check for known websites known to be associated with spam.

SURBL claim that using these types of lists combined with traditional blocklists upto 95% of spam can be blocked.

This particular blocklist from SURBL focuses on pill and snowshoe websites.

AOL’s new IP based reputation monitor

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AOL has today launched a new postmaster site. The new site along with its design revamp contains information on best practice guidelines, its whitelisting policy including the three different types of whitelist available, one of which allows guaranteed delivery (goodmail certified mail) and how to join their feedback loop.

For more information on why you should join their feedback loop click here for our previous article on the subject.

In addition to the normal postmaster information listed above AOL has created an IP reputation check tool.

The tool allows anyone to check on their IP reputation as it is measured by AOL. This is a great feature for bulk mailers.

This reputation check allows mailers to see if their RDNS (reverse DNS) has propagated to the AOL servers, one of the basic requirements to send mail to AOL is to have a valid and resolvable rDNS entry, and a 3 color traffic light indicating the status of the IP:

  • Green is good
  • Yellow is neutral
  • Red is poor
  • Grey is unknown (AOL have no data)

AOL say that “Mailers should take time to familiarize themselves with this new site, the valuable information contained therein and update their existing bounce codes/classifications with the published ones. AOL’s quote on their new website.” Sound advice.

You can familarize yourself with the new AOL postermaster site here.

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