• Uber Delivers 15,000 Emails To Australian Government Via Horse And Buggy
    Uber is fighting for ride-sharing rights the old-fashioned way: by delivering letters to the government by a horse and cart. The company printed out more than 15,000 customer emails that support the company's right to offer its car service in the country and delivered them to Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk on Tuesday.
  • SEC Opposes Email Privacy Act
    The Securities and Exchange Commission opposes the Email Privacy Act. The bill, which will require law enforcement to get a warrant before reading a person's email, "would create a dangerous digital shelter for fraudsters," the SEC claims. The agency thinks that the bill lacks a way for civil law enforcement agencies to get around warrants. The bill just passed the House and has moved onto the Senate.
  • EasilyDo Mail App Makes It Easy For Consumers To Turn Off Email Tracking
    EasilyDo, a popular productivity app for iPhone users, is expanding into email. The company has created a new email app that will make life more difficult for email marketers. The app allows users to turn off email tracking, as well as to quickly and easily unsubscribe from newsletters.
  • The Canadian Government's Massive Email Migration Is Taking Longer Than Expected
    The Canadian government's plan to impose a single email-system across its network has been delayed again. The project was supposed to be in place by March 2015, then by the end of May 2016. Now the organization has postponed the migration until further tests and improvements can be made.
  • ISIS Prefers Gmail To Yahoo Mail
    Members of the terrorist group ISIS prefer Gmail over Yahoo Mail, according to a new report by cybersecurity firm Trend Micro (TMICF). The research also revealed that Telegram, a mobile chat tool that offers encryption, is used by 34% of jihadists, while WhatsApp is used by about 15% of this group. WhatsApp usage dropped offer after the service was used in several anti-terror raids.
  • Software Developer Tracks His Own Email Usage For Three Years
    San Francisco-based software developer Mark Wilson tracked his personal email usage for three years to determine how his inbox was affecting his life.
  • Dell's Report on The Dark Web Provides Menu for Hacking Services
    Hackers will break into a Gmail, Yahoo or Hotmail for only $129, according to a recent report from Dell on the Dark Web. The site found that the cost to break into an email has gone down while the cost to steal a person's bank account details has gone up.
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