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mail.com

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Mail.com
Type of businessWebmail provider
Available inEnglish, Spanish, French
HeadquartersPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America
Area servedUSA, Europe (Except German-speaking countries). No longer accepts new registration of account in worldwide, including Asia.[1]
IndustryInternet
ServicesEmail, Cloud
ParentUnited Internet
URLwww.mail.com
AdvertisingYes
RegistrationYes
Launched1995; 29 years ago (1995)

mail.com is a web portal and web-based email service provider owned by the internet company 1&1 Mail & Media Inc., headquartered in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States.[2] 1&1 Mail & Media Inc. is a subsidiary of United Internet Group, a publicly listed internet services company based in Montabaur, Germany.[3]

Services

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mail.com provides email service and cloud storage, offering a selection of more than 100 email domain names for the creation of email addresses.[4]

Domains

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mail.com provides more than 100 brand-neutral email domains that have geographical locations, professions, beliefs and interests, such as email.com, usa.com, religious.com, graphic-designer.com, and catlover.com.[5]

Security

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mail.com requires a personal phone number to set up an account. A verification of a mobile phone number is required if users want to enable two-factor authentication (2FA), a form of multi-factor authentication, followed by the configuration of Time-based One-Time Passwords.[6] If 2FA has been enabled for an account, logging in to that email account requires a dynamically generated code.[7][8]

All mail.com customers' private data stored in the company-owned data center located in Lenexa, Kansas, United States.[9] mail.com uses SSL to ensure secure data transfer via the internet.[10] Both in the mail.com account and on the online portal, users' data is processed in compliance with legal requirements. mail.com also offers configuration options to control interest-based advertising and newsletter settings.[11]

mail.com email accounts have an antivirus that scans through emails and attachments, while only checking for malware. The anti-spam filter also helps detect junk mail and automatically sorts it into the spam folder.[12]

Alias email addresses

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An alias address allows users to customize the sender email address shown in their correspondence by creating an additional email address within an existing mail.com account. Up to ten alias addresses can be registered at the same time, all associated with the main mail.com email account. This feature enables the use of multiple email addresses from a single mailbox.[13]

History

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mail.com was originally formed in 1995 as Vanity Mail Services (corporate name Globecomm Inc.),[14] by Gerald Gorman, an investment banker at Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, and Gary Millin, a Harvard Business School student at the time.[15]

They spent a majority of Gorman's wealth[15] to register and promote a total of 544 domains, and later began to buy domain names from other companies. At one time the company owned more than 1,200 domains on speculation, including world.com, usa.com, india.com, europe.com, asia.com, doctor.com, scientist.com, and lawyer.com.[16] To raise money to pay the yearly domain registration fees, they offered vanity domain email services to the public[17] from the domains they owned under the brand name iName,[17] and later began hosting mail services on behalf of the owners of other domains, and for Internet service providers. The speculation was often successful. In 1999 the company sold kosher.com, london.com, and england.com for $2 million.[18]

By 1999 the company had raised venture financing from Primus Capital Funds and Sycamore Ventures, and changed its name to mail.com. It conducted an initial public offering in June 1999.[19] By 2000 it was supporting 14.6 million email accounts, mostly for free, and remained unprofitable.[17] It sold the mail.com domain and consumer email services division to Net2Phone,[20] changed its name to Easylink, and changed its business operations to focus on managed file transfer services in April 2001, after acquiring Swift Telecommunications, which in turn had spun off the "Easylink" business unit from AT&T.[21][22][23]

In 2002, AltaVista quit the email service business they had served together with Mail.com under its i-name branding. Addresses using "AltaVista" domains were eventually closed; other email domains once offered by AltaVista remain operational through Mail.com.[24]

In 2004 Jay Penske, son of automobile racing figure Roger Penske, joined and became CEO of Velocity Services, an affinity marketing and Internet services company operating as Interactive Digital Publishing Group.[25] The company acquired the mail.com domain, and re-launched it as a new service in 2007.[26] Parent company Mail.com Media Corporation (MMC) went on to acquire content websites such as Deadline Hollywood, Movieline and the Boy Genius Report.

In September 2010, MMC sold the mail.com email and portal service to United Internet, at the time already Europe's largest internet company,[27] which intended to operate mail.com on its GMX email platform. While existing accounts could be accessed from anywhere, users accessing the site from German-speaking countries could no longer sign up and were instead invited to use United Internet's GMX services geared to those markets (gmx.de, gmx.at, gmx.ch). In purchasing the mail.com brand, United Internet was aiming to leverage the unique character of the mail.com name and its many domains as part of its push for international expansion.[28] At the time of the purchase CEO Jan Oetjen noted, "On the highly competitive international e-mail market, we perceive mail.com as a unique opportunity for differentiation which cannot be copied."[27]

In the first quarter of 2016, mail.com launched a new support and contact portal, offering improved usability and FAQs for its customers. The first mail.com mobile email app for Android users was released in February 2016, complementing its iOS app. A mobile webmailer was also rolled out.

In June 2020, mail.com celebrated its 25th anniversary.[29]


References

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  1. ^ "We're very sorry – we can't sign you up - mail.com help". support.mail.com. Retrieved 17 September 2021.
  2. ^ "About mail.com – The right email address for everyone". www.mail.com. Retrieved 19 July 2023.
  3. ^ Tsotsis, Alexia. "Mail.com Media Sells Mail.com To United Internet Group". TechCrunch.com. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
  4. ^ "Best free email service 2023: Send messages for free". toptenreviews.com. 26 July 2022. Retrieved 19 July 2023.
  5. ^ "Mail.com Review". toptenreviews.com. Retrieved 19 July 2023.
  6. ^ "Two-factor authentication - mail.com help". www.mail.com. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
  7. ^ Nield, David. "How Two-Factor Authentication Keeps Your Accounts Safe". Wired.
  8. ^ "Two-factor authentication statistics: A good password is not enough". www.dataprot.net. 10 April 2023.
  9. ^ "mail.com Press Room". www.mail.com. Retrieved 19 July 2023.
  10. ^ "Ssl-mail.com Domain Reputation Report". www.ipqualityscore.com. Retrieved 19 July 2023.
  11. ^ "Data Protection with mail.com FreeMail". www.mail.com. Retrieved 24 June 2020.
  12. ^ "Email Spam has met its match | mail.com". www.mail.com. Retrieved 24 June 2020.
  13. ^ Fischer, Stacy. "These Are the 11 Best Email Accounts You Can Use for Free Right Now". Lifewire. Retrieved 4 June 2020.
  14. ^ "EasyLink Services Corp. To Appear on MN1.com" (Press release). M2 Communications. 6 September 1996.
  15. ^ a b Peterson, Andrea (11 February 1999). "Mail.com Intends to Profit by Giving Away Its Product". The Wall Street Journal. New York.
  16. ^ Lawson, Stephen (28 March 2000). "Mail.com Buys Chinese Portal, Plans World.com". ComputerWorld. Retrieved 1 August 2017.
  17. ^ a b c Bociurkiw, Michael (2 June 2000). "Mail.com Shouldn't Stay Master of Its Domains". Forbes.
  18. ^ Gruner, Stephanie (17 June 1999). "European Firms Pay Big Money to Obtain '.Com' Domain Names". The Wall Street Journal. New York.
  19. ^ Barrett, Larry (30 June 1999). "Mail.com surges on ISP deals". Cnet.
  20. ^ Mariano, Gwendolyn (21 June 2001). "Outages delay Mail.com service". Cnet.
  21. ^ "Mail.com to Acquire Swift Telecommunications, Including AT&T's EasyLink". internetnews.com. 21 February 2001.
  22. ^ Keenan, Faith (4 July 2001). "On the Third Try, a Dot-Com Charm?". Business Week. Archived from the original on 7 July 2001.
  23. ^ "Mail.com Changes Corporate Name and Identity to EasyLink Services Corporation" (Press release). Easylink. 2 April 2001.
  24. ^ "AltaVista to close free US e-mail accounts next month - PC World Australia".
  25. ^ Shipnuck, Alan (12 July 2004). "Hitting Cleanup". Sports Illustrated. Vol. 101, no. 2. p. 89. Retrieved 26 October 2017.
  26. ^ Chowdhry, Amit (22 October 2008). "Quadrangle Capital, WI Harper Group, and Novel TMT Ventures Delivers $35 Million to Mail.com". Pulse2. Archived from the original on 21 December 2014. Retrieved 7 October 2010.
  27. ^ a b Corporation, Mail com Media. "MMC Announces Strategic Transaction With Europe's Largest Internet Company". www.prnewswire.com (Press release). Retrieved 19 January 2021.
  28. ^ "Mail.com Media Sells Mail.com To United Internet Group". TechCrunch. Retrieved 19 January 2021.
  29. ^ "Email pioneer mail.com celebrates 25 years of reliable service and unique domain names". www.mail.com. Retrieved 15 February 2022.
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