Certified Email Not Here to Reduce Spam 197
An anonymous reader writes "Goodmail CEO Richard Gingras surprised Legislators and advocacy groups today when he announced that the CertifiedMail program being implemented by AOL and Yahoo is not meant to reduce spam. Rather than helping to reduce spam Gingras claimed that the point is to allow users to verify who important messages are really from, like a message from your bank or credit card company."
Re:Blue Frog (Score:1, Funny)
Here's the link without looking quite so retarded. [mozilla.org]
Can't login (Score:5, Funny)
"Certified" (Score:3, Funny)
Yeah someone's certifiable here.
Trust but verify. That it's crap. (Score:5, Funny)
Email address, Web URL, refering party -- each should be bulletproof BEFORE you extend your trust. Otherwise, you might get scammed.
Take this article. We know it's reliable and trustworthy. How?
Well it was submitted by "anonymous reader," who has posted many a fine gem on this here site.
Then it was filtered by an "editor" named "ScuttleMonkey." How can you not trust a monkey? Monkeys rock!
Then, when you click on the link, you see you have been taken to "Spam Daily News," a bastion of journalistic integrity that makes the New York Times look like the New York Times before Judy Miller got fired.
Finally, the whole thing originated from a little place we like to call "Slashdot." I think the quality of this brand needs no elaboration.
So as you can see, it is not hard to recognize a secure, reliable, not-at-all-misleading-or-shady chain of Internet links. Happy surfing!
Only one thing will work... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Can't login (Score:3, Funny)
Try this one... (Score:4, Funny)
Functionality may be limited.