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There was once a day when
you just could not find free email
accounts. You needed an ISP to connect to
the net and along with the price of that
connection, you were provided with an email
account. All ISPs offered email, some with
just one, others offering multiple email
accounts, all in an effort to capture
t he largest segment of net
users.
When free
email accounts made their debut, it was a
hard sell. "I've already got email. Why do
I want another? I'm already paying my ISP
for this service." Clever marketers, with
varying motives, sought to diss the free
accounts and many web sites, message boards
and forums refused to sign you up if you
gave a free email address. Not enough
control or proper oversight was the
purported reason. This created an
unfavorable image of free email service in
the public mind, having acquired the
earmarks of a second-class sort of email
account.
Today, some ISPs,
realizing the popularity of free email
accounts, the cost involved in maintaining
email for their customers and the current
competition among ISPs offering a
connection for less, are now countering
these disadvantages by offering a
connection only at a slightly reduced
price. This marketing trend is on the
rise.
Many of the big-name
search engines, such as Google and Yahoo,
along with hundreds of thousands of others,
offer free email accounts with plenty of
bells and whistles which satisfy the most
discriminating of web
surfers.
Some people use free
email accounts as their sole vehicle for
receiving all of their email. While some
websites are still resisting, demanding an
ISP-provided email address for registration
on their site, these are becoming the
exception.
For those who enjoy
subscribing to newsletters or the
occasional download, both of which require
an email address, free new email accounts
offers advantages. While reserving your
ISP-provided email for communicating with
family and friends, the free email provides
protection from spam that is sometimes
generated through a newsletter
subscription. Even when the website
producing the newsletter promises never to
share, sell etcetera, if you opt in for
additional information from other sites,
you run the risk of getting spam from the
outside
sites.
A few years ago, while
researching all things stock market, I
ended up with thousands of emails from
sites I'd never visited. The result? I had
to completely shut down my email address to
get rid of these unwanted communications
and start all over again. What a
mess!
Free email accounts that
can tie into outlookexpress is now what I
use. It will put everything not on my
contact list into a spam folder and simply
delete them after a month. Problem
solved.
If you want to compare
free email accounts there are free guides
available for the reading. You may well
find them so convenient, you can save a few
bucks on your ISP connection. Why
not?
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