From: Randall Randall (wolfkin@freedomspace.net)
Date: Wed Feb 03 1999 - 23:21:37 MST
It's been rumored that on Wed, 03 Feb 1999, Michael S. Lorrey wrote:
>Randall Randall wrote:
>Sounds all fine and dandy. Yet how do you force ISPs to charge per email? As I
I don't; see your own elaboration of the idea, below. :)
>Set the ISP mail servers up with a daemon such that any person with an
>email account
can establish a list of preferred correspondents, which
>the email user does not
charge a 1-5 cent fee. Anyone else who is
>unknown to the email box owner must pay
the entry fee to communicate
>preferred list, they must either pay the charge or get bounced. The
>charges that others pay can go toward the mail box owners monthly ISP
>fees....
>
>How about that? I'm sure that spammers will either go broke
>or fade into
obsolescence....
Actually, I think it would be simpler to just charge everybody a
small fee to receive data. Then it would always be the sender
paying, except when the receiver is willing to pay in advance
for what the sender would be sending (such as a request to
send to a browser).
-- Wolfkin. wolfkin@freedomspace.net | Libertarian webhost? www.freedomspace.net On a visible but distant shore, a new image of man; The shape of his own future, now in his own hands.-- Johnny Clegg.
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