Mailpiler - self hosted email archive
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@marcusquinn It's great news! Can you tell me whom should I contact to progress further?
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@jsuto said in Mailpiler - self hosted email archive:
@marcusquinn It's great news! Can you tell me whom should I contact to progress further?
I guess @staff would just need to give you access to https://git.cloudron.io/vladimir.d/mailpiler
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@marcusquinn @vladimir-d I have missed this one. Shall I move this to cloudron namespace and publish as unstable?
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@marcusquinn thanks, I can get this published. @vladimir-d can you please put a license?
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@girish First of of all, a huge thank you to all participants. This is huge step for seriuos mail providing especially in germany.... but, maybe I don't see the obvious. As it is published... am I able to install it via the appstore? Or do I have to use the cli route mentioned in vladimirs readme?
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@necrevistonnezr and @jsuto Thanks for this.
- Mailpiler and ordinary people
Mailpiler seems needed for corporations but I wonder how it might be useful to an ordinary person who self-hosts their email instead of using a proprietary service?
The archiving there would be just leaving mail on the server and/or downloading your mail too and keeping it locally with something like Thunderbird.
- Importing Dumps of Mail
Sometimes, people grow fedup with proprietary solutions for mail and want to migrate to a self-hosted solution. Services like e.g. Gmail allow you to dump your entire accounts email and save it offline. Is Mailpiler able to "one-click" import a dump like that, so we could search it easily offline?
Anyway, thanks for your help on logging in and being able to see how pretty the archived mail looks in Mailpiler. It was funny looking through the Broadcom wireless issues in the Fedora archive. Why do they do it, really? Couldn't they just Free their drivers?!
- Mailpiler and ordinary people
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@LoudLemur in germany there is a legal requirement for almost all businesses according to different laws and regulations to archive without the user haveing the option to modify, deleteā¦so before it getās in the inbox. Additionally you have to find mechanisms to not archive personal information due to regulations of the GDPR/DSGVO. Very hairy therefore a solution like mailpiler was developedā¦
Mailpiler is a software to archive not to backup so a different usecase
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@m-si said in Mailpiler - self hosted email archive:
@LoudLemur in germany there is a legal requirement for almost all businesses according to different laws and regulations to archive without the user haveing the option to modify, deleteā¦so before it getās in the inbox. Additionally you have to find mechanisms to not archive personal information due to regulations of the GDPR/DSGVO. Very hairy therefore a solution like mailpiler was developedā¦
Mailpiler is a software to archive not to backup so a different usecase
Wow! That is pretty much George Orwell / 1984 / Police State legislation right there. Was there much objection when it was being discussed/introduced?
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@LoudLemur
@m-si was not very precise: There's a requirement for businesses to archive business-related letters, emails etc. for a certain time (usually 5 years, up to 10 years) - for compliance, tax, and audit reasons. -
@necrevistonnezr you are absolutely right. @LoudLemur as the same legislative rules already applied to the paper-based business communication for a long time before already... from the surveillance perspective you are right, but it is not the government but the business owners, that are collecting the information and need too anyway to fulfill the business. When I look from different angles on it, I even sort of can understand it.
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As a business owner it makes you safe in legal cases (HGB) or financial audits (AO, GoBD)...
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As an end-user/citizen I like the regulation because, that way it is a bit more difficult to mess around with taxes (I think taxes are fair as long as all of us pay them) and with the GDPR rules we in Europe are always able to ask for deletion, change and handing out of at least any personal information...
IMHO So there is as always a fine line between surveillance and the security/freedom we as a community deserve and rely on and in my eyes we as the technical enablers have to consult at that point wisely...
But I'm neither a judge nor a lawyer anyway
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