Apology from Plaxo

My previous post about Plaxo joined in with the blogosphere’s opinion that Plaxo needed to apologise for their spam they had knowingly sent out. This morning I discovered that Plaxo’s CEO had made a full, public apology – even to the point of making a dig at themselves with a picture of flying pigs in the post.

This apology is greatly appreciated from someone who has both been the receiver and unintentional sender of such spam. I’m sure this will be good for Plaxo’s business. Thanks.

Links:

No more spam from Plaxo

Plaxo have made a couple of high visibility blog posts today saying that they are restricting the amount of automatic emails (a.k.a. SPAM) get sent out by users of their service. This seems like a good thing but it’s the way that they went about it that is leaving a bad taste in people’s mouths.

A summary of Todd Masonis’s post today reveals the following facts:

  • Plaxo have known for a long time that they were spamming people
  • But it’s OK – they were only spamming people to build up their customer base
  • Now that they have enough customers, they’ll stop spamming you
  • They also want to be good net-citizens, that’s their other reason for stopping the spam
  • If you had joined Plaxo sooner, they would have stopped spamming you
  • And by the way, it wasn’t Plaxo spamming you – it was their customers.
  • (Did I mention that they’re not sorry about it either?)

I’ve been using the Plaxo service for the last couple of years and have unintentionally spammed my entire address book a couple of times, and have been flamed for it too. Especially from the people that I have no reason to stay in contact with! Plaxo have always made it too easy to spam your address book – I have never seen a warning message pop up that says: “You are about to send out hundreds of emails – are you sure you want to do this?”

But moving on, they say they are going to stop the spam and that’s a good thing. Apart from that, Ive always enjoyed using their service – it works great for keeping your Outlook data synchronised between multiple computers or profiles. Let’s hope that Plaxo hasn’t caused too much of a bad name for itself among the influentials.

UPDATE: Plaxo have now made a public apology, see my post here.