@@IdeaSpot “We must accept finite disappointment, but never lose infinite hope.” - Martin Luther King, Jr. Like Mr. King, I have a dream, that one day on Redmond or Mountain View California, the sons of former email admins and the sons of corporate owners, will be able to sit down together at the table of brotherhood, and be able to send email freely without the fear of rejection and blacklisting.
@@IdeaSpot Bullshit. Setup your own mail server, containerized, whatever. Anything beats having genocidal zionist corporations sucking your soul, and every email you send.
His points seem to apply to hosting an email server for other people to use. For example, forwarding email (spam) through your server, data privacy rules, using your server to send mass eamil news letters. If you are using this for personal use for family and friends or business where you have control over how your employees use the service and not sending spam yourself I don't see how most of his reasons apply. Also would the use of IPV6 ip addressing avoid the long list of existing blocked ipv4 addresses?
Do you know any (possibly free or cheap) SMTP relay service that does not add the "List-unsubscribe" header? I'm sending personal e-mails, not a mailing list :(
Hi Alex, I hope you are doing really well. I have been watching your cloud hosting-related videos for a few weeks now. Recently, Namecheep suggested that I migrate my shared hosting to their cloud hosting (One kind of force). Unfortunately, I didn't have a way to do that at the time. I'm not very technical, and after migrating my hosting to the cloud, I realized that I don't know much about cloud hosting. I am commenting here to find out if it's possible for me to migrate my website back to shared hosting with another hosting company. I would appreciate your answer as I'm not sure about this. It would be great if I could get back my old cPanel. Thanks,
Totally agree, I have a new client who's email is hosted on a techies email server which is setup to use POP3, not used pop3 in 10 years. I've got the job of migrating 10 emails to exchange. I was hoping to use the Microsoft email migration tool but I don't think that is an option?
i haven't looked at it since Bill Clinton was president, dosen't seem like there is an offical way to do it, but a workaround could be to export as pst first: community.spiceworks.com/how_to/186408-migrate-pop3-email-to-office-365-step-by-step-in-easy-ways
@@IdeaSpot I have heard something called Microsoft purview which allows bulk PST files to be added to accounts. Just trying find a video for the process. Looks a bit complicated to me
Hi Alex, can you please test: BitFire Security - RASP Firewall. BitFire: Performance: adds 1% to page creation time Memory: adds 0.01% to memory usage WordFence: Performance: adds 44% to page creation time Memory: adds 125% to memory usage
What do you think about cpanel email and roundcube client, that's what we get with shared hosting. I personally had no major problems, I'm interested in your experience, whether it worked for you or not, and what you propose as an adequate alternative. Thank you
These can be ok, the software you mention is good - the real question is the team managing it, how good are they at keeping it secure and kicking out spammers on their network? If it's working ok for your needs then its fine. In my own experience, when you're trying to email important people who work in MS/Google/Apple environment, you will have more success with the mainstream options. How much $ is it worth to NOT have the conversation 'yes we sent it...did you check your spam folder'?
@@IdeaSpot I agree, you are absolutely right. I almost had a situation where more than 10 computers in one company use the same email office@domain, so I couldn't implement google workspace because their system can see a large number of logins to the same account as a security risk and block the account, so I didn't find another solution besides the default cpanel email.
Nope, this guy is totally wrong. If you do everything right, you’ll get 100% deliverability. What do you need to do it right? Multiple servers; clean static IP addresses; external DNS MX, A, and PTR records; SPF, DKIM, and DMARC; great anti spam and anti malware services.
Please make an updated video - does this still stand after their 2/2024 algo update (gmail)? Have a friend that has seen an ENORMOUS deliverability boost from a vps.