Maybe you should focus on delivering email instead of refusing it.  Or just 
keep refusing it and trying to bill people for it, until you make yourself 
irrelevant.  The ISP based email made more sense when most end users - the 
people that we serve - didn't have persistent internet connections.  Today, 
most users are always connected, and can receive email directly to our own 
computers, without a middle man.  With IPv6 it's totally feasible since unique 
addressing is no longer a problem - there's no reason why every user can't have 
their own MTA.  The problem is that there are many people who are making money 
off of email - whether it's the sending of mail or the blocking of it - and so 
they're very interested in breaking direct email to get 'the users' to rely on 
them.  It should be entirely possible to build 'webmail' into home user CPEs or 
dedicated mailbox appliances, and let everyone deal with their own email 
delivery.  The idea of having to pay other people to host email for you is as 
obsolete as NAT-for-security, and this IPv6 SMTP thread is basically covering 
the same ground.  It boils down to: we have an old crappy system that works, 
and we don't want to change, because we've come to rely on the flaws of it and 
don't want them fixed.  In the email case, people have figured out how to make 
money doing it, so they certainly want to keep their control over it.

-Laszlo


On Mar 26, 2014, at 2:07 PM, Lamar Owen <lo...@pari.edu> wrote:

> On 03/25/2014 10:51 PM, Jimmy Hess wrote:
>> 
>> [snip]
>> 
>> I would suggest the formation of an "IPv6 SMTP Server operator's club,"
>> with a system for enrolling certain IP address source ranges as  "Active
>> mail servers", active IP addresses and SMTP domain names under the
>> authority of a member.
>> 
> ...
> 
> As has been mentioned, this is old hat.
> 
> There is only one surefire way of doing away with spam for good, IMO.  No one 
> is currently willing to do it, though.
> 
> That way?  Make e-mail cost; have e-postage.  No, I don't want it either.  
> But where is the pain point for spam where this becomes less painful?  If an 
> enduser gets a bill for sending several thousand e-mails because they got 
> owned by a botnet they're going to do something about it; get enough endusers 
> with this problem and you'll get a class-action suit against OS vendors that 
> allow the problem to remain a problem; you can get rid of the bots.  This 
> will trim out a large part of spam, and those hosts that insist on sending 
> unsolicited bulk e-mail will get billed for it.  That would also eliminate a 
> lot of traffic on e-mail lists, too, if the subscribers had to pay the costs 
> for each message sent to a list; I wonder what the cost would be for each 
> post to a list the size of this one.  If spam ceases to be profitable, it 
> will stop.
> 
> Of course, I reserve the right to be wrong, and this might all just be a pipe 
> dream.  (and yes, I've thought about what sort of billing infrastructure 
> nightmare this could be.....)
> 


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