ATT Broadband Forfeits Mediaone Domain 169
Kancer was among the many readers to write with news (as carried by the Boston Globe) that "'beginning next month through March 15, current subscribers with (username)@mediaone.net addresses will be required to change them over to an address ending in attbi.com.' Also 'After March 15, any mail sent to a mediaone.net address will be rejected.' What a pain, looks like they are taking down pop mail and replacing it with web-based e-mail as well."
Never used the mail anyway (Score:3, Insightful)
Enough said
Chris Woodruff
Re:Hello Jackass. (Score:1)
Re:Hello Jackass. (Score:2)
Yep, they do. You have to be willing to get their newsletter, but that's no problem because they only seem to send it once every few weeks.
Still, I agree with the original poster. Getting a domain is the best way to go.
@home (Score:3, Funny)
i_am_not@home.com is just more funny that i_am_not@haw.ca
Re:@home (Score:2, Funny)
"...more funny than i_am_not@shaw.ca"
oh well...
Re:@home (Score:1)
privacy issues (Score:2)
remember, aids testing is anonymous in the US because certain
school districts were caught drooling over the prospects of being able to use the info to fire suspected gay teachers.
http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/97jun/burr.ht
Re:I've got a solution (Score:3, Insightful)
It IS a big deal when software activation codes, hard disk keys (for copy protected software), all sorts of "account info," etc. are tied to email addresses. I don't exactly trust a forwarding service such as yahoo mail for a more permanent solution. Sure, it is not the end of the world, but it can be a real pain to prove you are who you are to some vendors after your email changes.
It also simply sucks if you have an email address you actually like (rather than epd54346@blahblahblah.com). I went through this whole nightmare when MSN assimilated Qwest customers. I am NOT having a hotmail or MSN account- so I switched to a local ISP out of principle- and that was not without its bumps considering I use DSL and there are few people at Qwest who have a clue what they are talking about (they obviously give tech support from a script). Granted this is a different company, but it is the same set of issues. If you vote with your feet, you still get spanked.
Re:I've got a solution (Score:1)
Re:I've got your right wing conservative right her (Score:1, Offtopic)
Al Queda is not a Palestinian organization. Their agenda is considerably different. Simply because they speak they same language and worship the same way doesn't make them allies any more than, for instance, Greenpeace and the KKK, although no doubt from several thousand miles away it would be easy to view them both as just "American dissidents" and lump them together.
no more spam (Score:1)
1st.
A Sad Day for ISP services. (Score:2, Insightful)
This used to be the whole reason to get an ISP because there were no free POP servers. Great.
I dont want to be looking at web-based email all day.
Re:A Sad Day for ISP services. (Score:1)
attbroadband.com as well? (Score:5, Insightful)
What does attbroadband.com have to do with mediaone? Probably nothing, they just said to themselves "well we're going to piss off 100000 subscribers by making them change their email addresses, what's a few thousand more? Then they'll all look the same!"
Cuz we all know how much marketing people like to make everything look pretty =)
Re:attbroadband.com as well? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:attbroadband.com as well? (Score:1)
anyone with @mediaone.com will have to get a new email address... AND anyone with @attbroadband.com will have to get a new address as well.
The sad thing is, they just went and deleted all the mediaone.* newsgroups and created a new attbroadband.* hierarchy to replace them. No doubt they'll want to move them to attbi.* now.What newsgroups? (Score:2)
According to what I've read and what I'm experiencing, there IS no newsgroup server anymore to house the newsgroups.
Problem solved.
POP3 Will Be Available (Score:4, Informative)
Web based email blows (Score:1)
current atbi mail sux (Score:4, Funny)
they will only let you get remote mail via an att web page, so it's no longer integrated into the client with all your other mail..
they claim this is an improvement. in order to let you access mail remotely - which every other tin-horn isp can let you do anyway...
1. half speed since dec 1
2. 11% price jack
3. dns sux
4. dhcp pool sux
5. toy mail
if i'm gonna grab my ankles like this, i at least want a free pair of better looking sneakers.
I wonder if AT&T talks to itself? (Score:2, Interesting)
They also ONLY do encrypted mail; you can't do regular POP3, only encrypted. (I think it's over SSL, but I'd have to go review my settings and I'm too lazy to do that now.
It seems really weird that att.net and attbi.com don't talk to each other. Sounds like att.net has it a hell of a lot more together.
Re:current atbi mail sux (Score:2)
Re:current atbi mail sux (Score:1)
-Desco-
Re:current atbi mail sux (Score:2)
i don't care about most places - i care what comes out of my checkbook.
service went from 3 mbps to 1.5 mbps
i'm getting half the speed for more money.
if that's your idea of fair, good luck.
suppose they cut your cable channels by half and the price went up. what would you do?
we don't care how they do it in dsl land.
i can't get dsl to my door
the dsl in ct sux anyway
if they can do this what else can they do - the data side of their biz is unregulated, doncha know.
Re:current atbi mail sux (Score:1)
Well, in the last couple o' months, ATT Cable did just that...They've started moving the interesting channels to their new "digital cable" service, and upped the price for this service.
But whoop-de-doo! If I change to the new service I can get 45 music and 38 PPV channels! Oh, my lucky stars!
for $450 you get 1.5 synchronous (Score:2)
the 'everyone gets 1.5 fair and square' argument doesn't hold water. you think they can guarantee everyone on the block 1.5?
feh.
my bad - meant 1.5 symmetrical (Score:2)
do the math (Score:2)
January ON MY STATEMENT was $50.95
delta $5,
divided by $45.95
= 11.69590643274854% increase.
Any questions?
Re:do the math (Score:1)
50.95 / 45.95 = 1.1088139281828073993471164309032
10.88% increase
And they wonder why nobody can balance the books
they are not getting rid of POP. (Score:5, Informative)
WebMail is for people who move around and want to check their account from non-attbi network connected computers.
Some people also prefer WebMail to using Outlook Express (the only supported mail client -- although there are instructions on the web for other clients)
Re:they are not getting rid of POP. (Score:1)
USER jraxis
PASS foobar
LIST
RETR 1
DELE 1
RETR 2
DELE 2
QUIT
I can do SMTP too!
</sarcasm>
pop only works thru the cable modem (Score:2)
they must think we sit at home bug-eyed to their pipe.
a case of 'depends' and you never have to leave the house.
They do this on dial-up too... (workaround). (Score:1)
Re:they are not getting rid of POP. (Score:2)
If so, I suspect many technically inclined people will start running their own mail servers.
I run an IMAP server on my home box, and it's made life a LOT easier.
-John
Can't count on uptime (Score:2)
and another thing... (Score:2)
- only used that address to respond to official mail from them to that address;
- and still got epic amounts of spam thru my @home account.
- the buzz is that they had a massive absconding of email records but nothing more, they deny it absolutely.
-any confirmation of this?
-JP
weak as kittens, dumb as a sack of hammers.
Re:and another thing... (Score:1)
I went to cancel and the CSR stated I had over 1200 emails. I told her I NEVER used this account, nor did I EVER give out the address as I did NOT KNOW IT. She stated that "sometimes this happens" and I had to clear out all the email before they could cancel the account. I asked for the login and password, and she said "None have been assigned to that account" They assigned one, I logged on, and proceeded to remove a years worth of SPAM. All of it addressed to the email address. NONE of the mail was worth the time it took to delete.
I would bet they sold the list, similar to what QWEST is doing, before I would believe someone made off with information.
Re:and another thing... (Score:2)
Just for a yucks I checked my email there yesterday afternoon, or was it Thursday.
I've never used my mediaone email address and I had 50 messages waiting for me. 2 from ATT and 48 spam.
Technicians and knowledge of security breaches (Score:1)
Generally, if it's only a rumour, don't contact the company asking for information; 99% of the time it's just a rumour. We get that at work (not @Home, although I subscribe to a former @Home service) all the time: people are convinced that one cable modem is faster than another (when they don't even max out the speed on either), or that they're suddenly going to get 4 Mbps speeds, or something else that doesn't have any official backing.
I'm not accusing, just noting something as both a user and a cable modem tech support rep.
Re:and another thing... (Score:2)
So now I get a new spam trap @attbi.com. *shrug*
No one who knows anything uses their ISP's email account for anything important, anyway.
What worries me is not what they do with their crappy mail servers, but that they might someday go the way of other ISPs and start blocking TCP to port 25.
Re:and another thing... (Score:2)
I wouldn't necessarily blame that on the company. What spammers will often do is launch a dictionary attack against a mail server. This is when they send spam to every possible combination of letters and numbers that has a decent chance of being an e-mail address. Many of the e-mails will bounce, but some will get through. If your address was at all common (the username wasn't complete gibberish), that could have been what happened. Now granted, most spammers won't want to see the bounces--they'll just insert a fake return address, but the ones actively building e-mail lists might, especially if they have a mailbox big enough to receive them and some software to weed through them and delete them from their list of possible addresses. And once your address has been confirmed as good, then you'll get more and more spam. Lovely, isn't it?
obscure names (Score:2)
Re:obscure names (Score:1)
I've never gotten spam at my AT&T email account, and I do have numerics in my username so that may have blocked the spam.
I despise companies giving out personal information as much as anything, but false accusations do not help the situation. They make the whole thing unwinnable for the honest folks.
reminds me of @home (Score:1)
Re:reminds me of @home (Score:1)
Forwarding? (Score:1)
Have they never heard of forwarding?
Re:Forwarding? (Score:4, Informative)
webmail outcry (Score:1)
It allows the ISP to reduce their support costs for two obvious reasons I see:
-Easier mail client to walk the "AOL crowd" through
-Webmail is less vulnerable to viruses designed for Outlook/Outlook Express
It also allows customers to view email from anywhere.
If you really need POP3 access, find a friendly local ISP and pay a few bucks extra a month.
Re:reasons for POP (Score:1)
-Webmail is slower and kludgier.
-I can see my POP mail when I'm not online, which is a great bonus for laptop users.
Re:reasons for POP (Score:1)
You have obviously never tried SquirrelMail [squirrelmail.org].
Please do, you'll be pleasantly suprised.
Re:reasons for POP (Score:1)
-I have yet to see webmail that allows me to filter mailing lists, family members, and business mail into their respective folders.
I can think of at least one Webmail client, the one I'm switching the ISP [stormforge.net] I own to. It's called SquirrelMail [squirrelmail.org]. To quote from the About page:
"SquirrelMail is a standards-based webmail package written in PHP4. It includes built-in pure PHP support for the IMAP and SMTP protocols, and all pages render in pure HTML 4.0 (with no Javascript) for maximum compatibility across browsers. It has very few requirements and is very easy to configure and install. SquirrelMail has a all the functionality you would want from an email client, including strong MIME support, address books, and folder manipulation."
Supporting plugins, you can spell check (using ispell or aspell) in two languages, filter spam, use black hole lists, etc. It's also GPL'd. It's also available in lots of languages so it isn't just US centric.
-Webmail is slower and kludgier.
It certainly can be slow like it was for me when I was syncing several thousand messages, but it's acceptable for hundreds of messages in multiple folders. And I like lower support requirements as a previous poster stated. Plus I think SquirrelMail is pretty elegant and it's easily brandable.
-I can see my POP mail when I'm not online, which is a great bonus for laptop users.
This is very true, but please remember that MediaOne/ATTBI is a residential service. I've got service from them and have for the last about 2 years. I work from home alot and have been unable to work frequently. Since I do and can't afford to not be able to work, I'm suckiing up the cost of the loop charge for a T-1 starting in a couple of weeks or as soon a Verizon can get off their ass.
Re:reasons for POP (Score:2)
ummm... (Score:3, Insightful)
pop will still work when you're on the cable modem itself - what we want is pop anywhere - so i can stop having to throw a switch every time i want to check all my mail on all my addresses - i have 6 to check between personal and admin respoonsibilities,
i'd like to give out my @home as it's the easiest to give by voice, but now i can't integrate it into a mail client unless i'm playing couch potato.
and for what good reason? certainly none on the customer end - have both - like every mom and pop isp.
Re:webmail outcry (Score:1)
Re:webmail outcry (Score:4, Informative)
As long as the mail client is standardized (ie: "We support this mail client, if you want to use another one, that's fine, we'll give you the servernames, but we won't help you with settings, etc...") then it's just as easy to walk someone through it. Heck, most tech support places just use a script they read from anyway - half the time the "tech" is as clueless as the user, at least in "front-line" tech support, where these kinds of queries get handled.
Webmail is less vulnerable to viruses designed for Outlook/Outlook Express
If it's being brosed by IE, it's insecure. Until MS decides to put some sane defaults in IE as to what kinds of scripts it will execute "out-of-the-box", and what kinds of system information and file access those scripts will have, it will be possible to exploit a user's system through any webpage.
Since 90% of their users will be coming in through IE, "added security" is most definitely NOT what they're getting. The Windows Addressbook is accessible through IE's scripting engine. Unless they have people ditch their addressbooks (good luck - I tried to get my parents to ditch theirs a while ago, in favor of a local webpage, in part to save them from being a node for addressbook worms, and they would not give it up. They were that attached to it.) it's not going to help.
What it will do is add a layer of indirection. IE can't be told to respond to a mailto: link by opening up a webmail client - so all those users are going to have to be explained to why clicking on an email link no longer allows them to email the address pointed to.
Re:webmail outcry (Score:1)
Err, last I checked, my Yahoo! Mail can do it, I downloaded the addon and it runs fine.
--joshua
Operator independence (Score:2, Informative)
Even a HoTMaiL account is better, or preferably some other for-a-fee services. The best and most expensive is to register your own domain name and point it to some hosting service.
Re:Operator independence (Score:2)
Re:Operator independence (Score:1)
I use yahoo (POP access) to help me write a spam-filtering program, and my own domain as a real email address. It's good to be able to give a different "suspect_spammers_website@mydomain.co.uk" email for each form you have to fill in, cos it makes it easier to track who's selling their email lists
Re:Operator independence (Score:1)
POP3 going away?!?! (Score:1)
Re:POP3 going away?!?! (Score:1)
> Earthlink) had concurrent email access, through
> POP3 and the web.
Yes, this is what Earthlink does (I'm a current Earthlink DSL customer). While I don't really use that account all that much, from what I've seen of the web client, it's not that bad.
attbi??? (Score:2)
Are you bi- curious?
Seriously, who came up with the domain name "attbi.com"? It might be vaguely easier to type, but sheesh.
Re:attbi??? (Score:1)
@home @attbi (Score:2, Insightful)
Oh BTW here [12.237.137.0] is evidence of Nimda living on. Depending on the day you see that log you may even see some CodeRed boxes out there.
Re:@home @attbi (Score:1)
Oh BTW here [12.237.137.0] is evidence of Nimda living on. Depending on the day you see that log you may even see some CodeRed boxes out there.
Gawd that looks just like the logs on my web servers currently!
Larger technical issue than thought at first (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Larger technical issue than thought at first (Score:1)
Re:Larger technical issue than thought at first (Score:2)
Huh? MX what? What's a POP server? Why doesn't everybody just use Webmail? This Internet thing scares me...
Actually, Webmail is cheaper for tech support, because they don't have to walk everyone through the settings for their mail clients. I don't mind walking somebody through configuring a mail client when they're reasonably competent, but for newbies it can be tedious.
Should ISPs provide email forward like USPS? (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe they could also include before resending a 4-line notice that they should ask the sender to change the reciever's address (whether in a personal mailbox, or updating a server profile). Then after, say, 3 or 6 months, it would be more reasonable to discontinue those addresses.
The only reason I think this can become more important is that as more people turn to online bill paying, they would need sufficient time to be able to point the various collectors' sites to point to the new address, and since some bills are only sent out every 2,3,4 or 6 months, this would allow for most billing cycles to occur once.
Re:Should ISPs provide email forward like USPS? (Score:1)
Re:Should ISPs provide email forward like USPS? (Score:2)
Re:Should ISPs provide email forward like USPS? (Score:1)
Re:Should ISPs provide email forward like USPS? (Score:2)
What about DNS? (Score:2)
I suppose this means that my spiffy old <username>.ne.mediaone.net (I have fought many times to keep it from changing to one of those ugly hXXXXXXXXX.ne.mediaone.net addresses) will get changed into some ugly attbi.com address.
Either that or they will forgo the PTR record altogether, or screw it up so the PTR and A records don't match. DNS incompetence seems to be a sad trend with AT&T lately.
Re:What about DNS? (Score:3, Insightful)
I suppose this means that my spiffy old .ne.mediaone.net (I have fought many times to keep it from changing to one of those ugly hXXXXXXXXX.ne.mediaone.net addresses) will get changed into some ugly attbi.com address.
Since the hXXXXXXXXXXXX.ne.mediaone.net addresses were machine-constant (X == MAC address, and therefore you always had the same name) I just pointed my www and MX records at that name for the first year. Then came the big DHCP/DNS "upgrade" a couple of months ago. DNS was screwed up for a week and a half. I went to DynDNS [dyndns.org] and haven't looked back. Free to host up to 5 DNS records; $30/lifetime to host 1 domain, and more reliable than AT&T will ever be.Re:What about DNS? (Score:3, Insightful)
What I'm talking about is the PTR records and the hopefully-matching A record going the other way. DynDNS can't help you there, because I seriously doubt AT&T is going to delegate your little part of in-addr.arpa to DynDNS.
Some paranoid admins won't allow connections from IPs that don't resolve into names or that resolve into names that don't resolve back into the IP. Rightfully so, I might add, as it only takes a modicum of competence (usually scripting) to ensure that reverse records are correctly set up. I don't want to suddenly lose access to those sites (as some friends on a different subnet have) because AT&T can't get their act together.
Sadly, competence seems to be going out of style. My personal favorites that I've seen lately (they've been portscanning me -- I don't go looking for this stuff):
12.161.192.5 => ip4.wpic.com.192.161.12.IN-ADDR.ARPA
207.252.75.118 => kayne1
Some folks clearly need to learn about $ORIGIN. (75.252.207.in-addr.arpa has turned into a lame server in the past few days, but used to be full of gems; the first one you can verify yourself.)
Alternatives for Boston area (Score:1)
http://www.rcn.com/massachusetts/
There's a popup with a list of towns supported; while not a *huge* area, it's better than being fscked over yet again by what happens to mediaone -- service went downhill when ATT acquired them, then again with the @home nonsense; I can't imagine the Comcast will be any *better*.
Medford and Cambridge city councils ought to get off their duffs and get RCN in to compete with the ATT megalith. Just *my* opinion.
Toodles,
--domsol
Re:Alternatives for Boston area (Score:2)
Finally AT&T is not doing this because they want to. They are doing this because they have to given the legal issues of the domain name. Not nice, not pleasant, but as long as the lawyers are going to play in the domain name space we should all get used to it even if we "own" our own domain names.
Unanswered questions (Score:3, Insightful)
From my posting on attbroadband.ne.techtalk.general [news]:
Re:Unanswered questions (Score:2)
I used to work for MediaOne.. They ALWAYS hated giving out these vanity hostnames, not sure why. They've been trying to phase them out forever but keep getting complaints, that's why they're still available. My guess would be that they would dump them.
DynDNS... (Score:1)
Change ISPs (Score:3, Informative)
Incidentally, you can buy domain-based E-mail redirection [dnscentral.com] for about $20 per year. So you can buy your own domain (maybe in .nom) just for forwarding purposes.
Make sure you get DNS MX record redirection, not mail forwarding, so the mail doesn't take an extra step.
Gandi.net has domain-based e-mail fwding (Score:2)
you can buy domain-based E-mail redirection [dnscentral.com] for about $20 per year.
Even cheaper: At Gandi.net [gandi.net], you can get your own domain name for €12/domain/yr. If you turn on Gandi's free mail and web forwarding, it redirects http://www.foobar4.org/rest/of/URL to http://you.your.isp/rest/of/URL or http://your.isp/you/rest/of/URL and forwards *@foobar4.org to you@your.isp with up to five exceptions going to other addresses.
Re:Change ISPs (Score:2, Informative)
This is a good idea. But you can do it cheaper, with extremely reliable providers. You can get MX records or full forwarding for free from ZoneEdit [zoneedit.com]. And you can get a domain for just $9 from GoDaddy [godaddy.com]. And you can forward it to account which you can access using IMAP with any mail client, or using the web, by using FastMail.FM [fastmail.fm].
This setup is that currently recommended by most of the community at http://www.emaildiscussions.com, which is the best place to find out about effective use of email.
AT&T's Secret DSL (Score:1, Informative)
(Obviously, most of these things are easy to get around. They're just annoying. When I signed up, AT&T was the only broadband service available to me, since you asked.
What's interesting to me is that no where on AT&T Broadband's site [attbroadband.com] do they mention that they also provide consumer DSL [att.com] service, hidden in their business site. I actually stumbled across this during another unrelated search.
I just found it interesting that AT&T isn't promoting this at all. Apparently they want consumers only on cable modems. Any thoughts as to why, especially when they've been having so many problems with their cable network?
Re:AT&T's Secret DSL (Score:1)
mediaone hostnames (Score:1)
Mediaone (in the Northeast at least) used to designate hostnames based on their customer's email address, ie. if your email address is slashdot5@mediaone.net, your hostname would be slashdot5.ne.mediaone.net. One of my favorite things about mediaone was that they assigned easy to remember hostnames, unlike pretty much every other ISP. At some point a few years ago they decided to change the system so that instead of email addresses, hostnames would be based on ethernet mac addresses, such as h000a05294027.ne.mediaone.net. Since I liked my email hostname, and they provided the option, I decided to keep mine. This custom hostname has remained active thus far. However, what will happen to it when the domain is changed to attbi.com? From looking at current attbi.com hostnames, they appear to be all based on ip addresses. This means not only will there not likely be custom hostnames, they will now be dynamic hostnames, instead of the static mac address/email ones. I will be disappointed when I lose my 1337 hostname on IRC
Re:mediaone hostnames (Score:1)
A Question(s) and a Comment (Score:1)
Comcast is doing this too... the solution is... (Score:5, Insightful)
1. Raised prices 20%
2. Eliminated all our email accounts (you can call in 3 weeks to get new ones... gee thanks)
3. Mailed us new cable modems and required us to self install them... then bring the old one back to them. (Not that this is difficult but for some people it might be... and bring the modem to US!!! BTW... the Comcast people were appropriately behind bulletproof glass when I brought the modem back)
4. Eliminated the NNTP server completely!
5. DNS servers switched several times and slowed to a crawl when it didn't timeout. (Because I run Linux and that is not a "client OS" it did not pickup the DNS servers from DHCP... I had to call a friend and have him run nslookup on his Win2k machine)
6. Web performance was in the 56k range and down several hours a day for several weeks while things were being changed over to Comcast... (It's now back)
My solution to all this since there are no other broadband providers in the area was to:
1. Setup a DNS caching server... performance increased 10 fold.
2. Register my own domain at dotster.com ($15 a year) and use zoneedit.com (free DNS!)
3. Use my new dynamic domain to setup my own mail server at home... I paid Zoneedit $11 for the year for email backup in case I was down for some reason. Now I have unlimited email accounts, POP, IMAP.... anything I want!
att the ruiner? (Score:1)
Screwed again (Score:1)
The article says nothing about taking down POP (Score:1)
Will ATTBI change again? (Score:2)
MediaOne was the name US West made up for the stuff it bought, mostly from Continental Cable. And Continental had already set up cable modem service as "Continental Express". But MediaOne really grew it.
Comcast has now agreed to buy ATT-B. Theoretically, the new corporation will be "AT&T Comcast", but there will be a separate AT&T Corp. (the original one) doing telephone and its own ISP stuff. So will "AT&T Comcast" keep the AT&T or ATTBI name forever, or will they decide next year to change it to "@comcast..." or @attcomcast..."?
Me, I'm glad that my real mail is still on a private ISP that lets me POP from anywhere. (I use a MediaOne cable modem.) My wife's email is on Yahoo, which allows both POP and webmail access. Yahoo just announced that their SMTP server will demand authentication (I can understand that, though I don't think Eudora Light can do it) but they still seem okay for POP, and the price is right. My gradeschooler is not happy that his email will be changing, especially if he loses his "name" portion. They'll honor your current @mediaone.net if there's no dupe already on attbi, but a lot of former @home users are already using that space.
IPSVC.NET? (Score:1)
pop.ne.mediaone.net = pop.ne.ipsvc.net.
pop.ce.mediaone.net = chmls22.ne.ipsvc.net
people.mw.mediaone.net = people.mw.ipsvc.net
use flashmail or yahoo for POP (Score:1)
SPAM and mass domain name changes (Score:1)
Re:attBB not attBI (Score:1)
Re:Failed to mention.. (Score:1)