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[ih] "Father of e-Marketing"
- Subject: [ih] "Father of e-Marketing"
- From: bill.n1vux at gmail.com (Bill Ricker)
- Date: Mon, 3 Jun 2019 16:26:55 -0400
- In-reply-to: <[email protected]>
- References: <[email protected]> <CAHxHggd0tbiRpriD4LToUiG80Uu6x2UYg1xoeenxnMfinUTS=w@mail.gmail.com> <[email protected]> <CAAbKA3U=KP5Y0E7e5o9MZbcyGCokC0+guZ+59aTXNRkeM08heQ@mail.gmail.com> <[email protected]> <CAAbKA3UvOKY7AoVncGFfra2oxMWA81-ai7yp-H8Gip=1Cm-ZmQ@mail.gmail.com> <[email protected]>
On Mon, Jun 3, 2019 at 4:10 PM Brian E Carpenter
<brian.e.carpenter at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > In May of 1864, a group
> > of British politicians received a knock on the door with a telegram
> > waiting on the other side.
>
> But those were individual messages delivered by hand, typically by a
> telegraph boy. To my mind it needs to be an automatic process to count
> as spam rather than junk mail.
Yes, much swings on whether it was transmitted by Bain auto-sender
from a prepared tape and received by a Wheatstone receiver, or merely
bulk mail with faux-imprimatur of the form and uniform of the
telegraph's sweat-and-blood last mile.
But as a social-engineering of the trusted new electrical comms
technology for marketing purposes, it's certainly a pre-figurement or
harbinger of the tragedy of the digital commons to come