My thinking is that email services are a commodity item that is moving over time by the standard economic forces to smaller numbers of bigger providers. Because it is provided "free" by the big outfits no one else is going to be able to run it as a profitable business, except in niches.
Furthermore, anyone who can't provide good security, top-notch reactive spam protection shouldn't be allowed to run a mail server. Maintaining anti-spam measures require effort and improves by having a large user base but has a tiny marginal cost per user. This favours bigger services. I haven't tried anything else for some time but my gmail service does extremely well at protecting me from spam, scams and and drive-bys. I see a further stability and continuity issue with using email domains that belong to small ISPs that can be bought and sold or even fold. In contrast, big free services like Gmail have (imho) a very high likelihood of being around in a decade or two offering the same baseline service under the same conditions (ie, data scraping which I accept, ymmv,) at the same zero price without data loss. They also allow you maintain a local copy should you wish to take the trouble, or to extract your mail history in bulk should desire to jump ship. ISPs are heading in the direction of becoming NBN resellers. Jim On 18 November 2015 at 12:18, David Lochrin <[email protected]> wrote: > My ISP has an email-server problem which results in outbound traffic from > users in my domain failing at some point on most weekends and staying that > way until they get to work again on Monday morning. > > They're apparently not going to fix this. Their suggested solutions are > to get a Gmail or other free email account, or acquire a domain and pay > another $11 p.m. for a _self-managed_ email service with them. Paying a > further $11 p.m. will give me a web server facility self-managed with the > same utility, so it looks a bit as though they're chasing small business > users. > > However their rationale is interesting. > > They claim the traditional ISP email service is no longer viable because > it's evolved from simple text based messaging to a "package" service where > users send all sorts of big attachments, and the cost of supporting a > bundled email service is no longer warranted. Furthermore, the cloud > services provided by Microsoft's Windows Live are taking email in a > direction where small ISPs simply can't compete. > > Is this sort of thinking becoming more general? Where is the ISP business > heading? > > David L. > _______________________________________________ > Link mailing list > [email protected] > http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link > _______________________________________________ Link mailing list [email protected] http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link
