On 01/03/2013 01:26 PM, Walter Bright wrote:
On 1/3/2013 1:22 AM, Russel Winder wrote:
I don't see that local or server-based storage makes any difference to
the ability to manage email. But maybe I am missing something about your
particular workflow.

1. I control the backups

The hosting company I use (csoft.net) has ssh access so, in addition to their backups, I go in once and month and run one was well.

2. Third parties don't have access to my email history. I don't care
what their "privacy policy" says - if they have it, they will use it as
they please. You have no way to even discover what they do with it

Unless you encrypt all your email, anything that goes to and fro is subject to snooping. Now, you'll likely make a valid point about them not having *all* the history, and this is a fair point. However, I assume that everyone has everything I've ever sent in the clear. After all, you don't think all those acres of computers under various agencies' headquarters are running SETI@Home, do you?

Now, where did I leave my tinfoil hat...

3. I've had email servers controlled by others "go dark", and poof, all
email gone

That's what backups are for. You could also run a fetchmail process locally to sync at a more rapid speed, so you get a local copy of everything and get the benefit of cross-device syncing.

4. I *need* my old email. More than once it has saved me from a lawsuit

No argument there. I have stuff going back to 1995 or so (and, ironically, the way I migrated from one mail client to another was to shove a boatload of POP email up to IMAP then leave it there), because there was no export function - which is what started this conversation in the first place!
--
Matthew Caron, Software Build Engineer
Sixnet, a Red Lion business | www.sixnet.com
+1 (518) 877-5173 x138 office

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