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[ale] Why Run your own email server?



Speaking of SSL and mail transmission... Anyone here tried running 
Darkmail yet? It's coming from Ladar Levison of Lavabit and, according 
to the specifications, does end-to-end encryption that includes 
metadata. Supposedly it's "back" compatible with SMTP as well. I've not 
looked at it in a while but it caught my interest after all the legal 
drama surrounding Lavabit and the Snowden leaks.

On 9/29/2016 1:21 PM, George P. Burdell wrote:
> Anybody who has actually run their own mail servers for a while knows 
> how much of a tremendous chore it is just to keep your mail from being 
> blacklisted.   Most major providers will, if one person acts up in 
> your datacenter and you're not at some enormous facility with a name 
> brand, simply ban the entire netblock.   They don't care about 
> collateral damage.   I even get mail server admins who block my Google 
> Business email ... and that's a PAYING space, and ergo one of the 
> least polluted netblocks for spam on the entire internet.
>
> Oh yea, you can still do your own mail server.  But why on Earth would 
> you want to?   How much money is your time worth?   How valuable are 
> your emails?   How much does it cost you if an important one doesn't 
> make it?   And I say that as a card carrying member of the EFF who has 
> more than a passing distaste for the surveillance state we have 
> become.   The NSA didn't kill private email servers ... spam did.
>
> It also doesn't help that pretty much every stand alone mail client is 
> varying degrees of unsatisfactory (at least for my multi-account 
> needs).   Opera Mail was PERFECT.  And they killed it.
>
> And we'll assume for the sake of argument that spam filtering isn't a 
> problem and there are tremendous mail clients available.    That 
> doesn't fix that the overwhelming majority of email traffic goes over 
> in clear text, and the NSA will almost certainly see and record it in 
> transit with their strategy of putting snooping stations just upstream 
> (up-pipe?) from major people of interest like Google.   If one day all 
> email is traversing over SSL, Alex's idea will be the simplest way to 
> defend your privacy without signing up for the headache of running 
> your own mail server.
>
> On Thu, Sep 29, 2016 at 12:01 PM, Alex Carver 
> <agcarver+ale at acarver.net <mailto:agcarver+ale at acarver.net>> wrote:
>
>     On 2016-09-29 02:30, DJ-Pfulio wrote:
>     > Even client/lawyer communications aren't safe from DHS prying:
>     >
>     >
>     http://www.homelandsecuritynewswire.com/dr20160927-feds-we-can-read-all-your-email-and-you-ll-never-know
>     <http://www.homelandsecuritynewswire.com/dr20160927-feds-we-can-read-all-your-email-and-you-ll-never-know>
>
>     Yes, this is why I run my own server and download my free email
>     services
>     (gmail, etc.) to my local hard drive on a regular basis (deleting the
>     server side copies after download).
>
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>
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