On Tue, 16 Jun 1998, Leo Bicknell wrote:
I think the operational issue is who uses RBL, not that it exists. When a customer purchases e-mail services from an ISP there should be no blocking unless it was specifically part of the contract. For instance, I believe it would be a bad thing for an "aol" or a "hotmail" to use the RBL to filter mail. Basically it boils down to content filtering being bad for an ISP.
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If an ISP advertises that it is anti-spam and participates in the RBL then the customer knows up front that the ISP is filtering known spamblocks. The ISP can even put it in their policy documents/user access agreements. If they (the customers) don't like it they can select an ISP who lets all the sewage pass through. As long as you are up front about it the customer has the choice to use them or not.
-- James D. Wilson netsurf@sersol.com
Some of us would even market this as competitive advantage! ;-) -- Steve Hultquist, VP Engineering High Speed Access providing high-speed Internet access Boulder, Colorado mailto:ssh@HSAcorp.net +1.303.581.0800 http://www.HSAcorp.net/