Ask HN: What can you do when “unsubscribe” doesn't work?
I've gone through a "successful" email unsubscribe process quite a few times with some companies, only to find out that nothing really happened (keep receiving weekly/monthly spam).
These aren't shady companies either: they are large legit entities in the US.
I've given them the benefit of the doubt a few times, thinking that perhaps a bug failed to write my update to their subscription database, but after a handful of tries with the same outcome, I realized it is not isolated.
Of course I can add an email filter, but that will not take care of the root cause that most likely affects everyone else too, whether it's a deliberate attempt at denying my request to unsubscribe or simply a bug that nobody has a way to report.
What is a proper gentle nudge to say "hey, your unsubscribe system is broken, please fix it"?
There is usually no contact info available to have this kind of "out of band" communication.
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[ 4.0 ms ] story [ 79.4 ms ] threadAlternatively, look up folks on Linkedin working at that company, preferably sysadmins/devops/whatever-its-called-this week, and e-mail them?
> Of course I can add an email filter
Then we're looking at a point where CMOs all around the world are getting bombarded with the same shit they force down people's inboxes.
Report it to their email service provider via the abuse@ alias[1]. Tell the ESP what the problem is and ask them to contact their customer and clue them in. Reputable ESPs do this regularly.
[1]: Use the “Received” SMTP headers to see which ESP a message was sent through: https://mxtoolbox.com/EmailHeaders.aspx, https://www.lifewire.com/email-headers-spam-1166360, https://www.smtp2go.com/blog/effectively-report-spam/
I believe the incentives are more aligned than you might think. An ESP isn’t risking revenue by telling a customer that something’s not working and making them fix it. All parties know that ignoring it manifests in poor deliverability, often quickly (thanks, Gmail “Spam” button!). In my experience, your skepticism is justified about ESPs permanently shutting off a customer, but they’re comfortable doing anything short of that.
It’s great to detect security leaks, but I can also just delete the address and then any email to it will bounce. This usually gets you off their list anyway after a hard bounce.
I think there are some services that lets you set up forwarders, and even some domain registrars will give you this for free or a small fee (although I guess the script part might be something you’ll have to figure out)
I have other reasons for having my own server (more mailboxes, domains, vendor lockin protection, own backups etc)
If a company leaks your email or stops respecting your choice about how they email you, you can just blackhole that username+aliases@gmail.com straight to trash.
If a service refuses to allow you to use + in your email address you can use the period “hack” (I call it a hack, cause iirc it was meant as impersonation protectionand not meant to be used this way). On gmail your username can basically have as many or as few periods in it as you like. So using the Foo.Bar@gmail example foobar@ f.oobar@ fo.obar@ Fooba.r@ etc etc etc all work. You will just have to keep track on which username&period combo you used on X service yourself.
The only thing you can do is consider it a kind of digital chicken pox. It will always be a part of you, but hopefully it will remain inert. Never do anything to acknowledge that you have seen the messages or that you even remember that the sender exists.
I marked our PM's marketing as SPAM because they're sending emails to me when I never signed up for one.
Same situation. Humans were involved, and it was resolved.