The Ascii Ribbon Campaign official homepage (original) (raw)
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Against all HTML e-mail and proprietary attachments
Welcome to the official homepage of the ASCII ribbon campaign. Started as a semi-serious effort, it has become clear that more people should be made aware of some basic facts and guidelines about sending e-mail, in regards to HTML e-mail and proprietary e-mail formats. Since only a few scattered pages can be found, on different servers with no clear official homepage, this was a sign that something needed to be done. So www.asciiribbon.org was born!
Everyone is encouraged to spread the word on this campaign, and to direct people to this site for more information.
What is this campaign about?
Well, simply put: it opposes any and all HTML e-mail, and e-mail with proprietary attachments. Why? Actually, a number of reasons:
- Quite a few e-mail clients do not support HTML e-mail. This means that people who receive your e-mail are most likely unable to read it, as it'll be displayed as raw HTML code, or even not at all and just give an error message!
- Other clients have a very poor or broken HTML rendering, causing the messages to be unreadable as well.
- Sending HTML e-mails causes great overhead, and is very inefficient. HTML e-mail sizes are always much larger than plain text messages, even if they don't contain any graphics. A big portion of the internet users has a pay-per-time connection and/or a download limit on their account and will actually have to pay when they exceed it.
- HTML e-mails with a background image, flashy graphics (for instance the service Incredimail offers), are usually a complete waste of bandwidth, inbox space, and time. Having to download 200kb or more for an e-mail that contains a few lines of text is quite ridiculous. The same can be done in a fraction of that size (like, 0.1% of it!) when using plain text, saying exactly the same, and communicating exactly the same information.
As an example here the breakdown of a (real-life, used with permission) message with actually a lot of text typed (3 kilobytes), most messages won't get this large at all unless writing a half-essay to someone else:
Message: "FRIENDS WITHOUT FACES(w/sound)".125665557554555.GIF [image/gif, base64, 58K]
I 1 [multipa/alternativ, 7bit, 17K]
I 2 [text/plain, quoted, iso-8859-1, 3.0K]
I 3 [text/html, 7bit, iso-8859-1, 14K]
I 4 DOT_Flowersg4a122212222332224221222.jpg [image/jpeg, base64, 100K]
I 5 !cid_03f701c31824$5b06d6d0$2edb98c8@cida [image/gif, base64, 29K]
I 6 monoset purple344434444554446443444.gif [image/gif, base64, 10K]
I 7 BLUEAN
I 8 Friends Without Faces6111511112211131171 [audio/wav, base64, 635K]
853 KB total. - People that are limited to a text-only terminal, people with disabilities, blind people, basically anyone that cannot use a graphical interface easily or at all, are likely unable to read your mail.
- It even poses a serious security risk if "inline graphics" are used and downloaded on-the-fly when you preview or open an HTML e-mail. Smartly constructed image links can "call home" to, for instance, an advertisement server and get a confirmation with your e-mail address and IP address, browser type, operating system, time zone, and even more information, confirming that the e-mail was indeed opened and viewed, all automatically, and with that confirming your address as being read and a good target to send SPAM!
A real-life example of such a link that I received in an e-mail (domain name obfuscated, no personal attack is intended against any company here): Which would mean -if- my e-mail reader would try to display this image, it would contact spamserver.com, tell them the mail was actually opened, and if my browser was set to default behaviour, give them my e-mail address entered in it as well as the time zone I'm in, my IP, browser type, operating system, (a lot of information is passed in a default header of a web browser requesting any page) and whatever the specific code means for them internally that is passed to the script in this link... Security, anyone? - Another security issue to consider: Since HTML e-mail is usually rendered by some browser back-end, either internally or externally supplied, any vulnerabilities in those back-ends will also be a risk for the recipients of e-mail. An exploit can be directly targeted at groups of users, and simply viewing the e-mail would pose a serious risk. For example, an Internet Explorer vulnerability would pose a danger to people using Outlook.
- More reasons can be found than these of course. Many more, in fact.
Proprietary mails are even worse. They impose on the recipient the use of a certain operating system, certain program, or certain office suite even to open and read e-mail. Think of getting an e-mail in the form of a word document. The idea behind it is that one can send a word document and have text formatting and layout preserved regardless of the recipient's e-mail client. However, e-mail clients will never be able to open this kind of document internally, are often limited to launching an external program, or a program that may not even be available for their operating system at all. Basic text formatting and layout can also be done in plain text. Not to mention the fact that the document headers usually contain personal information, installation information, and more, about the sender that unknowingly gets sent along.
What can I do to help?
I'm glad you asked!
You can actually do a few things to help:
First and foremost, configure your e-mail client to send only text messages. A tutorial for Outlook and Netscape can be foundhere
Secondly, show your support by adding an ASCII Ribbon Campaign signature to the e-mails you send out. Some examples:
() ascii ribbon campaign - against html e-mail
/\ www.asciiribbon.org - against proprietary attachments_
ASCII ribbon campaign ( )
against HTML e-mail X
/ \
O< ascii ribbon campaign - stop html mail - www.asciiribbon.org
More can be found on the pages linked to below!
- Thirdly, spread the word that e-mail should be, and remain, a plain text communication medium - it is what it was designed for, and it is exceedingly efficient at it! Using plain text doesn't limit you in any way; you can still send attachments and images to your friends and contacts, it just means that the actual content of your messages is in a format that can be displayed correctly on any system.
Links
This page wouldn't have been possible without the people that started this effort. Please find below links to some (but surely not all) pages related to this campaign with more information, more signatures, and more help! If you feel there is something absolutely essential missing here let me know.
the semi-official, semi-serious ascii ribbon campaign against gratuitous graphics on the web! (English)
ascii ribbon campaign (English)
7 reasons why html e-mail is evil (English)
no html mail (defunct) (English)
losderover.be (Dutch)
ascii ribbon campaign (German)
ascii ribbon campaign (English)
ascii ribbon campaign (English)
Please, no MS Office documents (multi-lingual)
Rant against HTML mail (English) [translated in German/auf Deutsch]
Put an end to Word attachments (English)
Contact
If you have additions, comments, complaints, you can drop me a line by usingthis contact form.
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