Marc Perkel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > EFF's newsletter is free speech and is sent only to subscribers. Razor > has miscategorized it as spam and as a result of that > miscatagorization the newsletter failed to reach the normal inbox of > users who legitimately wanted to recieve this information.
That is ultimately the fault of the user, or his agent whom he 'hires' to deliver his email. If the agent (eg ISP) is blocking mail reported by Razor (or any other system) against the wishes of the user then the user should complain to the agent responsible. > Razor is interfering with the free speech rights of the Electronic > Frontier Foundation and the rights of 30,000 subscribers. No it is not. Although the EFF has the right of free speech to publish effector, people also have the right not to listen. I am not an American, so do not know your laws very well but would it be against the First Amendment free speech rules for a news vendor to refuse to stock a particular newspaper or magazine? ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.net email is sponsored by: Scholarships for Techies! Can't afford IT training? All 2003 ictp students receive scholarships. Get hands-on training in Microsoft, Cisco, Sun, Linux/UNIX, and more. www.ictp.com/training/sourceforge.asp _______________________________________________ Razor-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/razor-users
