I agree with this, and though I know it’s snobbish, sending an order to a guy with an “@aol.com” or “@gmail.com” worries me more than sending one to a person at his “@companynamedomain.com” address.
A GoDaddy account and domain runs about $100-odd/year (I pay $300 myself, but I do file storage and some other add-ins.) If you’re going to run a business, get your own domain name merely to appear more professional and permanent.
This is true, but that’s not what **ZipperJJ **was saying. Email that you receive from your bank or other financial institution should never contain any ‘sensitive’ information. They should contain nothing more than general information and links to their website where you can go for further information. So your browser could certainly store the link, but that doesn’t contain any useful information in and of itself.
As for the issue of GMail reading your mail:
They’ve never, since day one, made any secret about it.
You get what you pay for.
I’ve used GMail since I was able to wrangle an invitation, and see no reason to stop now.
Anti-virus and spam prevention techniques also use automatic scanning, like Gmail ad servers do (and it’s not just Gmail’s email that serves ads, any more, either.) I didn’t think that should be a surprise to people, either.
Really, if you have super sekret secrets, do not write about them on the internet.
It’s kinda misleading to say they “read” your mail when it’s an automated scan for keywords. Nobody at Google knows or probably really cares about the actual content of your mail.
On a side note, it’s sort of interesting to see what Google (including YouTube) thinks I’d be into based on the ads they present to me. I wonder how accurate these “demographic profiles” I’m sure they have on every user are. Or if staff can access them.
OK - so I get a domain name.
What do I need to start hosting an email server? I can use Outlook Exchange correct? Is there and less expensive software I can use that’s fairly easy to set up?
If you are using GoDaddy’s hosting facilities, they can provide some pretty good email software, but you aren’t limited to that. Personally, Outlook would be the last choice of geeks like me.
If Gmail wants to know that I’ve bought a pair of earrings on Ebay or that my SDMB subscription is due, good luck to them. I only use Gmail for subscribed newsletters and such.
You don’t run an email server, you pay someone to let you use their email server with your domain name that you own. Any Web host should also be able to provide email hosting. Google has paid email hosting (where your email is @yourowndomain.com). You can pay for Exchange hosting if you dig Exchange. Just find someone else to do it.
I could run an email server if I wanted to correct?
Large busi9nesses must run their own, no? Seems they would want the security of maintaining their own servers.
I used to run one from my work desktop. If you have a static IP address, you could do it from home.
But its probably a lot easier and more reliable to just go though a web-hosting company. I think it costs like an extra dollar a month or something on GoDaddy.
Yes, you can set up your own free server using open source software like postfix. In general though, you end up needing to do a bunch of housekeeping to avoid other email servers from thinking your message is spam and refusing to deliver it so it’s almost always better to just let someone else handle mail sending for you.
By the time they get to the juicy parts of my emails, I doubt it will still have any useful relevance to them. There is no reason for me to be near the head of their reading list, so I imagine there are a billion or so people whose emails they will read ahead of mine.
Does anybody think your mailman never read your post cards or looked to see who was writing to you? Or that long distance telephone operators ever listened in, in the days before direct dial?