| ▲ | dqv 2 hours ago | |
Your intuition is way off, like dangerously off. But your comment is a great example to show a smug lawyer at Microsoft when they try to say there is no basis for the claim that these blocks against legitimate senders are defamatory. This has been affecting reputable senders who take spam reporting seriously, including MXRoute and Discourse. > No reports probably means your reporting system is broken. "No reports" can mean a lot of things. There is no "probably". The "you" in "your" is Microsoft because under a certain volume of email, they don't even send reports. I regularly test the abuse contact address for my server because of this exact unfair assumption - that it must be my fault. I have never once gotten an abuse report notification from Microsoft, but I have gotten a bounce message saying that I'm blocked because I apparently send spam! Btw, this was in reply to an email from a Microsoft user. Worse, I figured I'd just disallow any email from a Microsoft property - if an outlook (or hotmail or live or anyone else) sends an email, I can just bounce it and tell them to use a different service to reach me since I can't reply. Nope! Microsoft won't surface the bounce message to the user. So, I am barred from replying to Microsoft emails. I am also barred from informing the sender that their email won't reach me. It's defamation - the sender is always going to assume that it is my fault if I didn't reply even if the reason I "didn't reply" is outside of my control. > So putting that together, it seems like a small ISP screwed up and let spammers go wild, and Outlook blocked them for it. I can't really fault Outlook for that. Yes, in your imagined scenario, you can't really fault outlook. In the real world, however, outlook is very much to blame. | ||