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Re: Spamming
At 02:55 PM 8/22/96 +0000, Vipul Ved Prakash wrote:
>>
>> At 06:09 PM 8/20/96 -0700, Rich Graves wrote:
[deleted]
>> 1. Junkmail requires the SENDER to pay for it, not the recipient.
> Internet pricing models are complicated and debatable, but you surely
> end up paying for snail-junk-mail. Not directly, but hidden in the high
> first-class mail costs. More mail, more infrastructure, higher costs.
> This could be quite true for the net also, if we consider bandwidth costs
> money.
I beg to differ. The USPS considers "junk" mail their bread-and-butter.
Huge mailings of all manner of bulk mail (especially those that are PostNet
barcoded by the sender) pay the bills around the Post Office. Your "more
mail, more infrastructure, higher costs" argument is flawed. The post
office has many fixed costs related to maintaining their huge presence,
delivering to so many rural addresses. If we had to pay a per-letter basis
*discounting* the value provided by the infrastructure already in place
supporting the bulk-mail handling systems, we'd be paying roughly Federal
Express 2-day letter rates for each piece of mail (around $6.00, if memory
serves correctly.)
I do not say this to begin yet another "Privatize the USPS" rant. I also am
not interested in whether or not the USPS should be privatized, have its
criminal law protctions stripped, or even if the postmaster general should
report our stamp purchasing habits to Janet Reno. All I'm saying is that
the above statement ("junk mail = higher costs") is false.
John
--
J. Deters "Captain's log, stardate 25970-point-5. I am nailed to the hull."
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