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Google Politics

US Approves Google Plan To Let Political Emails Bypass Gmail Spam Filter (arstechnica.com) 94

The US Federal Election Commission approved a Google plan to let campaign emails bypass Gmail spam filters. From a report: The FEC's advisory opinion adopted in a 4-1 vote said Gmail's pilot program is permissible under the Federal Election Campaign Act and FEC regulations "and would not result in the making of a prohibited in-kind contribution." The FEC said Google's approved plan is for "a pilot program to test new Gmail design features at no cost on a nonpartisan basis to authorized candidate committees, political party committees, and leadership PACs." On July 1, Google asked the FEC for the green light to implement the pilot after Republicans accused the company of giving Democrats an advantage in its algorithms. Republicans reportedly could have avoided some of their Gmail spam problems by using the proper email configuration. At a May 2022 meeting between Senate Republicans and Google's chief legal officer, "the most forceful rebuke" was said to come "from Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), who claimed that not a single email from one of his addresses was reaching inboxes," The Washington Post reported in late July. "The reason, it was later determined, was that a vendor had not enabled an authentication tool that keeps messages from being marked as spam, according to people briefed on the discussions."
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US Approves Google Plan To Let Political Emails Bypass Gmail Spam Filter

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  • sigh (Score:5, Insightful)

    by jythie ( 914043 ) on Friday August 12, 2022 @05:25PM (#62784718)
    So... conservatives could not follow the politically neutral rules like everyone else, so instead of setting up their servers properly they claimed persecution and demanded Google change? Now there is a perfect example of 'anything short of preferential treatment is discrimination', or 'how dare you try to apply rules to us! freedom!!!!'
    • Re:sigh (Score:5, Informative)

      by narcc ( 412956 ) on Friday August 12, 2022 @05:37PM (#62784744) Journal

      That's about the size of it.

      Republicans accused the company of giving Democrats an advantage in its algorithms. Republicans reportedly could have avoided some of their Gmail spam problems by using the proper email configuration. At a May 2022 meeting between Senate Republicans and Google's chief legal officer, "the most forceful rebuke" was said to come "from Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), who claimed that not a single email from one of his addresses was reaching inboxes," The Washington Post reported in late July. "The reason, it was later determined, was that a vendor had not enabled an authentication tool that keeps messages from being marked as spam"

      • Well, it's an okay FP notwithstanding the vacuous Subject, but I feel like you're looking a technical tree and ignoring the political forest. Sending political spam is something all of the politicians can agree on, and it scarcely matters that some of them are technical imbeciles in doing it.

        Well, actually it does matter because they larger fools are going to ignore the unsubscribe requests and then prove that they were technically incompetent and therefore unable to honor those unsubscribe requests.

        Solutio

        • Why minimum wage? Why not professional billing for the affected? There is already precedent for billing a physician's service for overbooking at civil engineering independent rates. (the victim was a civil engineer, to be sure, but everything from housekeepers to laundresses are entitled to full recompense.)
          • by shanen ( 462549 )

            Minimum wage was a convenience to keep the proposed solution relatively simple and help justify the size-based penalty without calling for any proof of work or time.

            I feel like I should have clarified that the onus should be on the legitimate senders of email to prove they are not spamming. Basically that means tracking ALL subscribe and unsubscribe requests. Seems obvious that this would force them to validate every subscribe request and honor every unsubscribe request, but it's increasingly hard to believ

        • It's been suggested before that a system should exist to require that people not in your address book to make a [micro]payment in order to deliver mail to you. If you don't recognize the address, don't like the contents, or for any other reason, you can just keep the payment. You set the payment amount.

          I can't think of a fairer way to handle the problem...

          • by shanen ( 462549 )

            My version of this idea would have involved a separate email system with a gateway to SMTP. The gateway would be closed by default. But ain't gonna happen.

          • by ahodgson ( 74077 )

            Lots of stupid things have been proposed, including that one.

            The value in email is that everyone uses it. Without micropayments.

            • The value in email is that everyone uses it. Without micropayments.

              Letting other people decide what reaches your mailbox decreases its value when there are malicious actors in the system.

              • by ahodgson ( 74077 )

                You can block whatever you want but you will never get people to send you a micropayment to send you email. Including the next web site you sign up to, or your next hiring contact. Spending time thinking about non-solutions is pointless.

      • They are talking about DMARC/DKIM. It's easy enough to setup.

        • > They are talking about DMARC/DKIM. It's easy enough to setup.

          You can have a completely clean IP, DMARC/DKIM, SPF, everything set up properly with a good mailing list package, no blacklists, and Google will still route you to Junk half the time unless you use a big mail provider, even for small local nonprofit group messaging (nothing commercial, even, though that shouldn't matter).

          No support, no signaling, no query tool, obviously.

          Google doesn't gain profit from open network protocols.

          • You can have a completely clean IP, DMARC/DKIM, SPF, everything set up properly with a good mailing list package, no blacklists, and Google will still route you to Junk half the time unless you use a big mail provider, even for small local nonprofit group messaging (nothing commercial, even, though that shouldn't matter).

            That's true, but it's not an excuse for failing to set up DMARC/DKIM/SPF before whining about your spam being marked as spam.

      • At a May 2022 meeting between Senate Republicans and Google's chief legal officer, "the most forceful rebuke" was said to come "from Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), who claimed that not a single email from one of his addresses was reaching inboxes,"

        Damn it Google, when your software blocks emails from Florida Man, the correct response is: "Good, it's working as designed."

    • On the other hand, outcomes shows disparity and discrimination. No need to trace cause and effect; it may be presumed.

      I don't think that, but many do. In other contexts.

    • Re:sigh (Score:4, Insightful)

      by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Friday August 12, 2022 @05:45PM (#62784766)

      Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), who claimed that not a single email from one of his addresses was reaching inboxes," ... "The reason, it was later determined, was that a vendor had not enabled an authentication tool that keeps messages from being marked as spam,

      "But my emails!" exclaimed Karen Rubio, complaining about self-inflicted problems.

    • Re:sigh (Score:4, Insightful)

      by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Friday August 12, 2022 @05:57PM (#62784802)

      It’s been said before but,

      Gaslight
      Obstruct
      Project

      • The other side thinks the exact same thing about the Democrats. And they are as convinced that they are right as you are. How do we bridge the divide so we can actually work together and fix things instead of endlessly pointing fingers?
    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      What I want to know is how Google will identify political emails.

      Because it's obvious that if Republicans can't be assed to use a proper email forwarding system (e.g. MailChimp, etc), then pretty much any email can be marked as "political" and be used to bypass the spam filter.

      Which means almost exclusively that spammers will use it to bypass the Gmail spam filters.

      Of course, delicious irony could happen if Democrats decided to do proper email server setup and all that, making it easier for Google to identi

      • Re:sigh (Score:5, Informative)

        by Local ID10T ( 790134 ) <ID10T.L.USER@gmail.com> on Friday August 12, 2022 @07:36PM (#62785020) Homepage

        What I want to know is how Google will identify political emails.

        The Federal Elections Commission maintains a list of registered politicians/political parties /PACs/etc. Federal law requires registering with the FEC.

        Google will use the list of email addresses provided by the FEC as a political email whitelist. No message from any of the listed emails will be filtered as spam.

        Sucks for us end-users who don't want the political emails, but it gives Google a way to refute complaints of favoritism.

        • by splutty ( 43475 )

          I wonder... Can we get that list somehow and put it in our spam filter?

          • Yes, according to the article.

            bulk emails sent by the Pilot Participants to Gmail users would not be detected by Gmail's spam detection algorithms; instead, whether bulk emails are classified as spam would be determined based on direct feedback from the user." Users would be able to opt out of the messages.

            If you believe them, of course.

        • So all spammers have to do is put one of those whitelisted email addresses in the From header, and it will never get blocked?
        • What I want to know is how Google will identify political emails.

          The Federal Elections Commission maintains a list of registered politicians/political parties /PACs/etc. Federal law requires registering with the FEC.

          Google will use the list of email addresses provided by the FEC as a political email whitelist. No message from any of the listed emails will be filtered as spam.

          Sucks for us end-users who don't want the political emails, but it gives Google a way to refute complaints of favoritism.

          Federal "Do Not Call" list works about as well as a roll of paper towels in an epic flood. How will this list be any different? be more successful?

        • by mjwx ( 966435 )

          What I want to know is how Google will identify political emails.

          The Federal Elections Commission maintains a list of registered politicians/political parties /PACs/etc. Federal law requires registering with the FEC.

          Google will use the list of email addresses provided by the FEC as a political email whitelist. No message from any of the listed emails will be filtered as spam.

          Sucks for us end-users who don't want the political emails, but it gives Google a way to refute complaints of favoritism.

          Said list can be used to create a filter to block sender. Biggest issue is how to keep it up to date but I'm sure someone more familiar with vagaries of Gmail would be able to figure it out. The Republicans may have just shot themselves in the foot giving people an easier way to avoid their junk mail.

          This is especially for those of us who aren't American (but have an American woman with a similar Gmail address who keeps signing me up for shit, I'm JSmith@gmail, she's JSmith1@gmail). Seriously, I have ema

      • by quall ( 1441799 )

        The FEC will create a political registry for verified organizations. Email providers can then use that registry to determine if a political email is spam or not. It says this right in the article. You could have answered your own question.

        People may make fun of the buffoonery on why this fiasco started, but this will reduce fake/scammy political donation emails from getting through. It would allow stronger spam filters to be used on emails asking for political donations.

        • Re:sigh (Score:4, Insightful)

          by tlhIngan ( 30335 ) <slashdot.worf@net> on Friday August 12, 2022 @10:01PM (#62785220)

          The FEC will create a political registry for verified organizations. Email providers can then use that registry to determine if a political email is spam or not. It says this right in the article. You could have answered your own question.

          Yes, but have you considered the ramifications?

          Say Mark Rubio registers his organization with the FEC. But then does absolutely nothing and just sends out emails. How can someone verify it came from Mark Rubio? Because his email is in the From header? Given he couldn't be bothered to set up authentication, you can't count on SPF or DomainKeys or other mechanism.

          So anyone CLAIMING to be Mark Rubio can thus spam you, political or not, just going under the "political spam" exception. Because Mark Rubio is too stupid to make it possible to verify anything other than the From address.

          Doesn't matter though, I expect to get inundated with Mark Rubio Viagra, Mark Rubio extended car warranties, etc. etc. etc.

          The point is a fine one - how do you tell an email came from a politician and not a spammer? The From address is the same in both, and it's on the list of politicians - so political spam bypassing the filter?

          Emails can be faked, and there doesn't seem to be any way to say "this email came from the politician and not someone faking his return email address".

          Remember, this is a spam filter bypass. You can bet spammers will do everything they can to exploit it, and regular email has no way of saying "Yes this is an authentic message" without actually taking measures to make it possible to authenticate it.

          • Given he couldn't be bothered to set up authentication, you can't count on SPF or DomainKeys or other mechanism.

            You can count on SPF. If someone doesn't set it up, I don't want their email.

    • Well that would be how the article spun it, certainly.
      If it reinforces your personal beliefs, I guess that's enjoyable for you, isn't it.

    • by kmoser ( 1469707 )
      Google is a privately owned company and is free to accept or reject any ads it wants. They need to make that point, and keep making it, instead of defending their neutrality.
    • I think Google is trying to stay non-partisan and it's trying to stay within the guidelines set by the FEC. If you remember from the earlier /. article:

      It would make campaign emails from such groups exempt from spam detection as long as they don't violate Gmail's policies around phishing, malware or illegal content. Instead, when users would receive an email from a campaign for the first time, they would get a prominent notification asking if they want to keep receiving them, and would still have the ability to opt out of subsequent emails. [link in summary]

      Google is possibly trying to follow the guidelines similar to the exemptions in the Do Not Call registry:

      4. What types of calls are not covered by the National Do Not Call Registry? The do not call provisions do not cover calls from political organizations, charities, telephone surveyors, or companies with which a consumer has an existing business relationship. https://www.ftc.gov/business-g... [ftc.gov]

      If I get a single email from a PAC or campaign committee and can with a single click opt-out, I think that is an acceptable compromise to flagging all political email as Spam. Remember, you can always set custom filters for anything Gmail doesn't auto-f

      • It might be acceptable to you, but some people remember that you should never visit 'unsubscribe' ULRs in spam, because you're just telling the spammer that this address is being listened to and is worth spamming. And how do you get a 'prominent notification and single click opt out' when your email is being forwarded to another account and accessed with a text-based email client, for instance?

        No compromise with spammers. And it doesn't stop being spam just because the spammer is trying to sell a political

    • So... conservatives could not follow the politically neutral rules like everyone else, so instead of setting up their servers properly they claimed persecution and demanded Google change? Now there is a perfect example of 'anything short of preferential treatment is discrimination', or 'how dare you try to apply rules to us! freedom!!!!'

      Congress and the regulatory agencies are under Democrat control, in case you haven't noticed. So good luck with that argument.

  • Oh goodie! (Score:2, Insightful)

    by p51d007 ( 656414 )
    Like I don't get enough JUNK mail as it is! You know spammers will figure out a way to get past the filtering. Not to mention I still bet Google will be one sided on their political filtering. ;)
    • Too bad there are no other email providers that one might use.

    • Or worse, Google won't be one-sided, and Leftist inboxes will be filled with Trump propaganda....

    • by Zocalo ( 252965 )
      Depends on the implementation. There has to be some way for these PACs etc. to tell Google's servers its "legit" political spam, and that probably means something like an X-Header with a key, e.g. "X-Political-Junk: some-random-Google-supplied-hex-string", or some other mechanism that can be picked up via filters. If so, the joke's on the politicians because you just know that 99.99% of users with a clue, regardless of political affiliation and mail service provider, are going to immediately send any and a
  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Friday August 12, 2022 @05:38PM (#62784750)

    Can I, in gmail, still set up a manual filter and move all such email into my Junk folder? And, if I consistently flag such emails as spam as they come in, will gmail learn that I don't want them and start filtering them? Or - as I fear - does this amount to a "get out of jail free" card for all political spammers?

  • But it IS spam! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Major_Disorder ( 5019363 ) on Friday August 12, 2022 @05:39PM (#62784752)
    Unsolicited email I do not want. Keep your political crap out of my inbox. That goes for all parties.
  • by Jeslijar ( 1412729 ) on Friday August 12, 2022 @05:44PM (#62784764) Homepage

    Give us the option to automatically mark all political emails as spam and auto delete them. Maybe keep it disabled by default, but when viewing a single email marked as politics it will let you know with a banner than you can perma-spam them all in whatever way you wish, by party or all of them.

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      I agree. If messages are subject to this rule/exemption, then require a special code or marker somewhere, preferably the subject line, so that we can automatically filter/reroute such at our choice.

    • by quall ( 1441799 )

      You can write a rule right now. Any email that has "GOP" and "Donation", or "DNC" and "Donation" mark as read and delete it.

      The question is, will you actually do that?

    • All I can say is there better be an opt-out otherwise I will ditch Gmail and everything Google (since all their other services revolve around their mail). The wonderful [sarcasm] state of Florida has disenfranchised me from voting yet I'm still inundated with spam to register. So is my dog.
  • Not you.

    The politicians, possibly!

    Hopefully such non-sense would not stick with Europe's GDPR.

  • Isn't GMail a service provided by a company the way they want to provide it?

    Why is some governmental body even relevant?

    • The government isn't forcing Google to do this. Google decided to do this in response to complaints by Republicans, and they asked the FEC to decide now if doing so would be illegal, instead of implementing their plan and then getting sued for it later.
  • I kind of wish the discussion had gone higher, so I'll throw it out there: Why do we still have spam email?

    Ancient, well-known problem, and yet we still can't do anything about it? I've written about my basic solution approaches a number of times. Must be something wrong there, though I'm still too dumb to figure it out. Therefore what's your solution? What would you change or do to make the spam go away?

  • Seriously, whether the FCC allows it or not, I don't want this crap in my inbox... It certainly will have no effect on who I vote for or who I give money to.

  • Don/t use GMail.

  • Fuck that. (Score:4, Interesting)

    by e3m4n ( 947977 ) on Friday August 12, 2022 @06:11PM (#62784844)
    Its bad enough that the goddamn unsubscribe is fake. Its bad enough that sms has a fake remove, and blocking the sender is worthless because every 3 days they change the number. 5 minutes with a Louisville slugger. Thats ALL I ask for. That or give them a frontal lobotomy. Do you have any idea the number of filters I have trying filter what does get past the spam/junk algorithm?? Not running for a seat in my state? Fuck you. Your state is your problem. I dont give a shit whose dark money is fucking you. Get your state to ban foreign money.
  • by schweini ( 607711 ) on Friday August 12, 2022 @06:16PM (#62784858)
    Gmail should simply put all these political emails into another one of their 'tabs', next to "social" and "updates".
  • There are so many reasons not to use gmail. Reasons to use gmail are either laziness or poor judgement. So don't.

  • tell my bank and other VIPs to use text messaging to my phone number, that way i can whitelist my filter so if somebody isnt in my contact list i wont see it, and voicemail is a good screen for spam & robocalls, problem solved
  • Primary, Social, Promotions, Political

  • by godrik ( 1287354 ) on Friday August 12, 2022 @07:02PM (#62784970)

    Marco rubio recomend these PILLS TO GET YOUR JUNK BIGGER!

    You know it's coming! :)

  • if I gave them the email address, white listed the sender, I can get their email just fine. I don't need anyone else's help. Besides, Isn't the whole idea of gmail, that the email addy is a throw away.
  • But will not pass my custom rules to go straight to the Trash folder.

  • inb4 someone makes an add-on for gmail that lets users opt-in to block emails from specific political parties or candidates
  • There is some truth here that sending mail to Google's servers is actually quite difficult. As many small-medium postmasters know, Google tends to give cryptic errors and have a bonkers system for determining ip reputation that has NOTHING to do with actual spam rate. It's telling that Google gives powerful politicians (who DO spam) a free pass, and yet fobs off legit non-spam senders.
  • Just run your own server with your own spam filters. Google streamlined their "don't be evil" motto some years ago by dropping one word.

    • by wbean ( 222522 )
      It isn't that easy. I ran my own server for years but Google's spam filters are much better than anything I could work out. Now I redirect all my mail through gmail simply to take advantage of their filters.
  • I'm going back to hosting my own servers.

  • Gives me an easier way to find out which addresses to block manually I guess
  • If you get political spam, send an email from a disposable address, or one which isn't monitored regularly and just used for sign-ups, or similar, to the sender or any link it gives for contact, telling them that you don't vote for spammers, and having received a spam email from this party, you will not be voting for them in the future.

    Let them fear that they might be losing a vote every time they add an address to their lists.

  • " Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), who claimed that not a single email from one of his addresses was reaching inboxes," because you are a fuck wit and your grifting emails are spam!
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Just another reason to find a different email provider.

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