For quite some time now I have been receiving and, mostly, enjoying The Daily Brief from the Huffington Post. But in the past couple of weeks I have noticed that my "dailies" are arriving later and later...so late, in fact, that they haven't yet shown up my my mailbox when I decide to call it a day, and in fact arrive at some point late at night or in the wee hours of the following day.
When I began to note that I was reading a lot of Huffington posts on Digg.com which I hadn't yet seen in my mailbox, and would usually receive the following day, I dropped the Huffington folks a friendly, I thought, inquiry. Maybe there was an issue with their delivery service. Maybe there was an issue with my e-mail provider. Maybe they would like to know about it.
Maybe not.
I sent my query just over a week ago--Friday, January 16--and in short order received a message headed "Thanks for Contacting HuffPost."
And that's the last I've ever heard from them.
No, no--I wasn't expecting a reply. In fact, it says right in the "Thanks for Contacting HuffPost" message that I won't be getting one, and that's fine.
What I mean is, they've quit sending the Daily Brief.
Is that weird or what? I write to enquire as to the lateness of the Daily Brief, and the response is to terminate the subscription? No, it's weird, all right.
Dear Huffington Post People: Now the Daily Brief is even later than before!
Well, obviously, I can go back to their site and just subscribe again and see how it goes. But how strange.
So now on top of the mystery of the later-and-later Daily Briefs, there's the mystery of who decided to pull the plug on me, and why.
This is no way to make friends.
Observations, ramblings, and miscellany from William J Reynolds. Politics, religion, computers, society--all are fair game.
Saturday, January 24, 2009
Thursday, January 22, 2009
Whistleblower: Bush's NSA spied on EVERYONE
With video: Rampant spying, especially targeting of journalists. The NSA had access to ALL YOUR COMMUNICATIONS, regardless of who you were or whether or not you were communicating internationally.
read more | digg story
read more | digg story
Wednesday, January 21, 2009
1,000 Words
Tuesday, January 20, 2009
Countdown Ended!
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