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by jjav 1322 days ago
> > Telephones haven’t changed for decades

> Now you're just being absurd. Do you think we had iphones decades ago?

An iphone is an implementation detail, it's not the phone system.

The great thing about phones is the longevity. My parents have had the same phone number since the late 60s. Anyone who's known them for the past ~50 years can still reach out via the same number. That's awesome.

No proprietay social network will ever match that because they come and go on the back of the controlling company revenue performance.

The only way to stay in touch for the long haul is open standards, in the case of internet that means: email

I've had the same email since the mid 90s and will have it for the rest of my life. If you've ever known me, you can still reach me on the same email now and into the future.

1 comments

That’s exactly why email has persisted, without any need for regulation.
Right until Google decides to block you
Nobody is forced to use gmail as a provider. Remember it’s a free service with less commitment to you than a pay as you go mobile phone.

Anyone can buy their own domain and there are many providers who will provide email service.

Imagine having a phone number nobody can call because it's blocked from sending or receiving by your telephone company...

The vast majority of email is hosted by one of the large providers these days and if people can't reply to you the utility of your address is lessened.

> Imagine having a phone number nobody can call because it's blocked from sending or receiving by your telephone company...

Fortunately that's not at all what having a personal email is like.

First of all, you can always receive email no matter what. Nobody is blocking that.

Sending it to some larger providers requires configuring everything correctly, but it's not rocket science. Lots of people (including me) do it with minimal effort.

Finally, having your own email (domain) doesn't require self-hosting it if you don't want. You can always delegate that part to some provider. But you control the domain so you can switch providers (or switch to self-hosting) any moment. You can also do a hybrid option where you self-host receiving but farm out the sending, if you prefer. So many options, all of them work!