Yahoo recently announced the addition of two new domains, ymail.com and rocketmail.com, in order to open up addresses for users that had previously been unavailable. Today on their blog they announced that they are encouraging people to move to the new accounts and delete the old ones at yahoo.com so that they are available again. They even offer a service to automate this process. The service is set up to notify people in users address books, but if you don't think that you've been successfully added to enough subscribers address books, it may not hurt to send a notification to yahoo subscribers to remind them to update their address to continue receiving your emails. If your list contains a large percentage of yahoo.com addresses this could mean an increase in complaints at that domain as people move around and new people adopt abandoned addresses.
Friday, June 27, 2008
Thursday, June 19, 2008
Yahoo Paragraph Spacing
Yahoo announced today that the issues with paragraph spacing are known and that a fix will be coming. They also offered a couple of tips for yahoo design until this issue is cleared up. Read the full article here.
Posted by Tim England at 2:33 PM 0 comments
Labels: Rendering
Friday, June 6, 2008
More Spam Law Updates
There have been several spam law changes in the world in the past month or so. Israel has passed a new spam law. The FTC of course released a ruling making clarifications to the CAN-SPAM law in the US (check out this MarketingSherpa podcast about it). MySpace was awarded $234 million in a spam suit. It makes one wonder what will be next.
Posted by Tim England at 10:09 AM 0 comments
Labels: Legal
Thursday, May 22, 2008
List Owners, Senders, and List Rental (oh my)
DISCLAIMER: I am not a lawyer and this is not legal advice.
Last week the FTC approved a new rule provision under the CAN-SPAM act. The ruling specifically addressed multiple senders and who could be a sender and also alluded to the concept of list ownership. Based on the combination of these things list rental can fall into a gray area.
If you aren’t advertising in a list rental email, even though you are the list owner, you may not be able to be considered the sender. This has a few interesting implications. Can the list owner be the branding in the from line? Can you, or even should you offer an opt-out mechanism? All of these also carry deliverability implications as well. For instance, if the branding must be based on the renter, your authentication may be broken. Senders might not be able to capitalize on personal whitelisting, which bypasses some filtering. If it isn’t possible to be completely opted out of the list owner’s emails via an unsub link, that will lead to an increase in complaints.
To me the best solution to this dilemma from a deliverability standpoint would be make sure to brand your emails in such a way as the list owner can be perceived as an advertiser. If the list owner can be considered an advertiser in the email they would be able to be the designated sender. As the designated sender you can reap the benefits of the changes in the CAN-SPAM clarifications. But equally important is the fact that it allows you to capitalize on your own branding to potentially boost response for your advertisers.
Posted by Tim England at 10:31 AM 0 comments
Labels: Legal, List Rental
Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Yahoo Drops Paragraph Spacing
According to this entry on the Email Standards Project blog, Yahoo has changed how they render messages. Yahoo no longer inserts space between paragraphs, so it may be necessary to include a margin of 1em to give some spacing. "The Email Standards Project is about working with email client developers and the design community to improve web standards support and accessibility in email." They have a number of useful articles about rendering across platforms including this one about Outlook 2007.
Posted by Tim England at 1:25 PM 0 comments
Labels: Rendering
Monday, May 12, 2008
FTC Approves New Rule Provision Under The CAN-SPAM Act
The FTC has announced that it is publishing clarifications to the CAN-SPAM act. The primary focus of the clarifications are (per the FTC release):
(1) an e-mail recipient cannot be required to pay a fee, provide information other than his or her e-mail address and opt-out preferences, or take any steps other than sending a reply e-mail message or visiting a single Internet Web page to opt out of receiving future e-mail from a sender;
(2) the definition of "sender" was modified to make it easier to determine which of multiple parties advertising in a single e-mail message is responsible for complying with the Act’s opt-out requirements;
(3) a "sender" of commercial e-mail can include an accurately-registered post office box or private mailbox established under United States Postal Service regulations to satisfy the Act’s requirement that a commercial e-mail display a "valid physical postal address"; and
(4) a definition of the term "person" was added to clarify that CAN-SPAM’s obligations are not limited to natural persons.
Read the press release here, and the full document is available here.
Posted by Tim England at 1:35 PM 0 comments
Labels: Legal
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
AOL Postmaster Updates
The AOL postmaster blog announced some more changes to the postmaster site. They have updated what had been their best practices to be their delivery requirements , and have introduced a new sender best practices page. According to the article "Failure to meet any of these [delivery] requirements will result in delivery issues."
Posted by Tim England at 3:59 PM 0 comments
Labels: AOL