|>-----Original Message-----
|>From: Harald Alvestrand [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
|>Sent: Wednesday, February 14, 2001 5:41 AM
|>To: Mike O'Dell; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
|>Subject: Relation email - person (re: Mail sent to midcom)
|>
|>I recently had the dubious pleasure of sending out 40.000 
|>emails to a set of email addresses gathered (with the owners' approval!) over 
|>a period of seven years.
|>
|>The result was roughly 10.000 bounces (naturally), dozens of 
|>requests to merge multiple registrations for the same person, and on the 
|>order of FIVE occurences of an email address previously used by one person 
|>now being used by another.
|>
|>The mapping address -> person is pretty strong, and mostly single-valued.
|>The mapping person -> address is multivalued, and getting more so.
|>
|>Not quite "not working", if we take it for what it is.

I would consider such results the fault of the list maintainer and not a fault in the 
email system.  Much like physical addresses used within the postal system, anyone 
maintaining a list needs to provide a means to maintain the validity of the data.  If 
the data is invalid it is a cost the person using the data has to carry.  It doesn't 
mean that all the data is invalid, just the means to keep it current was inadequate.  
Most mailing lists for instance employ means to maintain the integrity of the 
subscribtions, including regular probes.  There are means available for other types of 
lists, a lot depending on the usage and value.

Darryl (Dassa) Lynch.

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