I work at a company, where one of my duties is to select and train interns for the department. I get their CVs through a particular system, and if it satisfies our needs, I send the potential intern an email inviting them to an interview. Two times now my emails have bounced back because of your system. I suggest you fix your filters.
Pros:
nothing
Cons:
Bad filters
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This is just a solid idea and product, and is something that should have been baked right into email protocols from the start. It's growing fast, but I hope the online advertising industry gets wise to this soon so I can get more Credo!
Pros:
Less spam, plus getting paid by marketers when they want to reach me badly enough? I'm sold!
Please explain the required permissions for both email and coinbase so I can decide if I'd like to sign up.
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Saw the question, but don't think I saw the response (sorry if I missed it). How do you determine unsolicited? (also would help to have this on the site)
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Yes, I initially signed up , but then basically undid everything (authenticationwise) when I really thought about what I'm giving you permission do to. I think there's a trust issue that you're going to have to go through. Plus, I see nothing about pricing for this service. Perhaps you mention it on sign up, but it's impossible to find afterward. ....
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waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaayyyyyyyyyy too many permissions.
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Do you have a (free) email? If so I have a business Idea you may want to consider.
@turing@macgregordennis I need to ensure that all the permissions are revoked, too many weird things happening to my email. this is really bothering me, please reply promptly to my email.
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can you explain the function ''Automatically trust intros from your whitelist?''
the wording in whitelist part 2.1.3 Email via introduction
is confusing.
Reading through the comments here, I really feel like this is something that should've been run through betalist first, before posting on PH, to really iron out permissions, etc.
That said, it's basically a whitelist-only webmail (Gmail, Outlook, etc.) add-on that allows non-whitelisters to pay to be whitelisted, right?
My main issue with this is that there are plenty of 'unsolicited' e-mails I get from people that aren't in my contact list, that aren't sending me spam. Eg, if I list an e-mail address on a website for people to contact me - that's gonna get scraped by spammers and used for legitimate business enquiries.
Are there any smarts behind this that further distinguish between spam and mail from people not in my whitelist?
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This is the third product I see using fees against unsolicited mails: an interesting approach indeed. How is this different from previous attempts, 21.co, or even veropost.com which has been on and field-tested for months (without even needing an ICO)?
Replies
I work at a company, where one of my duties is to select and train interns for the department. I get their CVs through a particular system, and if it satisfies our needs, I send the potential intern an email inviting them to an interview. Two times now my emails have bounced back because of your system. I suggest you fix your filters.
Pros:nothing
Cons:Bad filters
This is just a solid idea and product, and is something that should have been baked right into email protocols from the start. It's growing fast, but I hope the online advertising industry gets wise to this soon so I can get more Credo!
Pros:Less spam, plus getting paid by marketers when they want to reach me badly enough? I'm sold!
Cons:Not enough advertisers are wise to this yet
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