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Live from the E-mail Authentication Summit: Classes of E-mail “Absolutely Inevitable:” Goodmail CEO

Different classes of e-mail are “absolutely inevitable” if the system is to advance to the point where users can trust it, said Richard Gingras, CEO of Goodmail Systems, the company whose CertifiedEmail scheme AOL is implementing over the loud protests of liberal activist group MoveOn.org and others.

Different classes of e-mail are “absolutely inevitable” if the system is to advance to the point where users can trust it, said Richard Gingras, CEO of Goodmail Systems, the company whose CertifiedEmail scheme AOL is implementing over the loud protests of liberal activist group MoveOn.org and others.

The remarks—made at yesterday’s E-mail Authentication Summit in Chicago—could be interpreted to bolster some of Goodmail’s critics’ arguments. Representatives of groups such as MoveOn.org claim that CertifiedEmail will lead to a two-tiered e-mail delivery system where senders who pay get more reliable delivery than even non-spammers who don’t.

However, Gingras said, senders are already paying to get e-mail delivered.

“We’re already in a world, really, where senders are paying to achieve certain ends,” he said. “All of us here [at the summit] represent that to one degree or another.

“It [classes of e-mail] just seems to me to be absolutely inevitable,” Gingras added. “We all look at e-mail and recognize it as the most powerful medium we’ve ever known. People in this room who are e-mail marketers talk regularly about their 4,000% ROI. That’s tremendous.”

Gingras added that e-mail is becoming a core component to every U.S. e-mail user’s life, “yet it’s obviously a troubled environment.

“We’re going to have to advance the system. Classified elements of elements of messaging are going to occur,” he said.

When asked after the panel if he meant classified in terms of delivery, Gingras said:

“What the consumer needs to know in this unfortunately unsafe environment called the e-mail inbox is how can I be comfortable engaging in a message, for instance from a financial institution or the American Red Cross, and be comfortable that that message is authentic?’” he said. “That requires systems such as ours which can clearly label those messages as good.”

He added that he does not think different levels of deliverability based on payment are inevitable. “I’m simply talking about how the messages are distinguished in the inbox,” Gingras said.

AOL announced in January that it was adopting Goodmail’s system under which bulk e-mailers can pay to have their e-mail certified as non-spam and guaranteed to be delivered with a seal of approval into AOL’s inboxes with graphics and links intact.

The announcement fueled a firestorm of criticism in the press, much of which lately has involved picking apart Gingras’ public statements.

“One thing I’ve learned in the last six weeks is that your words will be parsed to the syllable,” Gingras said.

“When I say class, I mean not every message in the inbox is the same. There are messages that are easily determined as comfortable and safe like a message from my mom. There are lots of messages that are suspect.”

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