I just want to be able to sign up for a do-not-message SMS list and a do-not-spam email list, specifically for political candidates.
The past year in particular I've been getting as much as daily political fundraising SMS's but every time it's from somebody new. Random representatives from across the country. I reply "STOP" each time and that same one never messages me again, but there are literally thousands and thousands and thousands of people running for state legislatures out there...
I'm fine with Google exempting political e-mails from other commercial spam, AS LONG AS there's a setting to send them straight into the trash.
And I say this as someone who's very politically active -- but there's nothing democratically enabling about getting messages from random reps in Wyoming, Hawaii, Idaho, Virginia, none of which are places I live or can vote in.
I went back to the dumb approach of setting up keyword filters (SpamHound on iOS, which allows a Regex-similar pattern).
You’d be surprised at how much spam gets blocked by a simple “http.*” filter. Of course, I occasionally do miss messages but it’s pretty easy to check the spam folder when I’m expecting a 2FA code or something. Known contacts are never blocked so it’s never really that much of an issue.
Check out the message contents you’re receiving. I bet you’ll find a similar pattern, maybe “(vote|election).*” would suffice.
Are they doing anything to make sure children aren't getting this junk? I think we're supposed to like, "think of the children", or something? Perhaps it does not apply when there is money to be made.
Have they planned for “false flag” spam campaigns by political opponents, “unsubscribe” links that take weeks to process (if ever), and other forms of abuse?
Unrelated, it would be nice if joining the program would require making mailing list checkboxes default to “opt out” instead of “opt in”. Then the mails would only go to people who explicitly requested them.
Is Google the only provider doing this so far? Has anyone created a git repo that tracks which mail providers are permitting governments to side-step spam filters?
I don't know if this exact solution is the correct one, but political campaigning is special as it is a fundamental part of democracy. So it does make sense to give it special treatment. Everything needs to be logical and explainable, rather than a mysterious black box.
Okay Google, we need to talk. I am thankful for you to show your true colors.
I am done with you. Thanks for providing me with the last straw I needed to cut ties. Who needs Google Workspace when Google (ab)uses us users as leverage for gaining influence in the political arena.
I expect a spam filter I am paying for to not create wholes in it for the highest bidder or gaining political klout.
I don't want Google to start allowing spam, but it feels unfair to blame Google for this. There is not many companies that would take the heat that comes from pissing off a entire political party by blocking their fundraising efforts. If they didn't have this program then they would have legislation forcing them to have this program. Republicans are not going to lay down and accept being cut off from marketing.
My natural question is how is it going to be administered technically and how can it be abused? Because as far as I understand this is a first in such a broad "exception", not banks or health institutuions have such an exception with Gmail.
Is it going to be based on SPF? DKIM? Are they gonna whitelist special IPs? What if a politician uses mailchimp? Is it going to be from .gov domains? Email delivery is famously hard to such an exception may lead to some abuse. Of course Google has a lot of engineering capacity but I can imagine a situation where a politician is offered a deal by some newsletter agency to give up access to email get-out-of-jail-free card given by google for a donation to their campaign by said agency.
You know, you can just not use gmail. Solves a lot of problems.
I have my email address publicly listed not only on my website but on my HN profile, and I still have a far better signal-to-noise ratio on my @marginalia.nu address than I do in my gmail address.
> “It’s sad that instead of simply stopping sending spam emails, Republicans engaged in a bad-faith pressure campaign — and it’s even more unfortunate that Google bought it,” Daniel Wessel, DNC deputy communications director, told The Verge in June.
The problem is that what google (or whoever) classifies as spam, and what is actually spam from the perspective of the user, are two different things. You could send a highly desired email to a single person, and have it marked as spam because the IP address you got auto assigned spammed people in the past.
So I think the idea here is that google will just never treat them as spam, because they actually aren't spam(at least, in the manner that penis enlargement pill emails are).
You can just unsubscribe if you don't want to receive them, I think? Do campaigns send unsolicited emails? I assume they would need to gather your consent by signing up for a mailing list somewhere before they start messaging you.
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[ 4.7 ms ] story [ 75.7 ms ] thread"There are some exemptions to the Do Not Call rules. Because of the limits to FTC’s authority, the Registry does not apply to political calls"
Senator Grassley to lead GOP effort demanding Google remove Gmail spam filtering
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32349079
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2022/08/04/republica...
e.g.
https://www.wikihow.com/Bounce-Emails
The past year in particular I've been getting as much as daily political fundraising SMS's but every time it's from somebody new. Random representatives from across the country. I reply "STOP" each time and that same one never messages me again, but there are literally thousands and thousands and thousands of people running for state legislatures out there...
I'm fine with Google exempting political e-mails from other commercial spam, AS LONG AS there's a setting to send them straight into the trash.
And I say this as someone who's very politically active -- but there's nothing democratically enabling about getting messages from random reps in Wyoming, Hawaii, Idaho, Virginia, none of which are places I live or can vote in.
You’d be surprised at how much spam gets blocked by a simple “http.*” filter. Of course, I occasionally do miss messages but it’s pretty easy to check the spam folder when I’m expecting a 2FA code or something. Known contacts are never blocked so it’s never really that much of an issue.
Check out the message contents you’re receiving. I bet you’ll find a similar pattern, maybe “(vote|election).*” would suffice.
So if one starts blowing up with spam, it's easy to filter that out, and to know exactly who is responsible.
Edit, duckduckgo and other services offer this as well.
Unrelated, it would be nice if joining the program would require making mailing list checkboxes default to “opt out” instead of “opt in”. Then the mails would only go to people who explicitly requested them.
I am done with you. Thanks for providing me with the last straw I needed to cut ties. Who needs Google Workspace when Google (ab)uses us users as leverage for gaining influence in the political arena.
I expect a spam filter I am paying for to not create wholes in it for the highest bidder or gaining political klout.
Is it going to be based on SPF? DKIM? Are they gonna whitelist special IPs? What if a politician uses mailchimp? Is it going to be from .gov domains? Email delivery is famously hard to such an exception may lead to some abuse. Of course Google has a lot of engineering capacity but I can imagine a situation where a politician is offered a deal by some newsletter agency to give up access to email get-out-of-jail-free card given by google for a donation to their campaign by said agency.
Personally I'm bit intrigued how these messages are leading to successful fundraising...
I have my email address publicly listed not only on my website but on my HN profile, and I still have a far better signal-to-noise ratio on my @marginalia.nu address than I do in my gmail address.
The problem is that what google (or whoever) classifies as spam, and what is actually spam from the perspective of the user, are two different things. You could send a highly desired email to a single person, and have it marked as spam because the IP address you got auto assigned spammed people in the past.
So I think the idea here is that google will just never treat them as spam, because they actually aren't spam(at least, in the manner that penis enlargement pill emails are).
You can just unsubscribe if you don't want to receive them, I think? Do campaigns send unsolicited emails? I assume they would need to gather your consent by signing up for a mailing list somewhere before they start messaging you.
Yes, they absolutely do. It's not even rare.