Since I've been in security for the last few years, I've talked to a zillion 
people about a zillion things, and one IT guy told me he ran the company's 
mailserver, which apparently got hacked and used to distribute some sort of 
illegal material. He found out when the FBI showed up and confiscated the 
server. They determined it was probably not the company's fault, so they 
returned the server (without any hard drives, a couple months later). By that 
time, the company had already resumed email service on some external provider 
(users are bound to notice and complain about several weeks of outage).

I think if you run your own mail server, unless you do mailservers 
professionally (24/7, with IPS/IDS, and watch the RedHat security channels and 
patch critical vulnerabilities in < 1day, etc etc) you expose yourself to 
unnecessary spam, and risk of being hacked.

The risk of being hacked is *not* so much the risk of someone accessing your 
mail. It's the risk of someone doing illegal shit on your system, and you 
getting the blame for it. Try 10 years in prison, and being permanently 
registered as a sex offender, probably getting divorced, because someone 
thought that was *your* kiddie porn. You find yourself in the position of being 
presumed guilty, having to prove your innocence, because illegal material was 
indeed found in your system, or in your account.

P.S. The same risk applies to cloud services, if you don't use strong passwords 
and 2-Factor on dropbox/gmail/etc. Using a password manager is a very important 
part of keeping yourself safe online.
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