I would like to know what’s the policy of Digital ocean about massive mailing regarding the CAN-SPAM compliance and SPAM fight best practices so as limits related to bandwidth, processing, emails per hour or email per day.
I’m planning to run a group of e-mail servers of my own to provide massive email service to small business and would like to understand how the SPAM compliances are handled since I will be commercially and legally responsible for this and only will be suitable to respond only to legal authorities. Also because for any decision that can affect my future customers I would be the only responsible.
More specifically where Digital Ocean staff has any intervention regarding the responses or actions related to any compliance made by people and/or large ESP providers like Hotmail, Gmail, Yahoo and similar. Also since the IP addresses will be exclusive to my servers what is the Digital Ocean’s position regarding any IP Blacklisted even in the low importance RBLs.
Not that I’m planning to do SPAM, on the opposite is something I’m really careful and need to understand all the things that may or not affect the service I’m going to provide.
This textbox defaults to using Markdown to format your answer.
You can type !ref in this text area to quickly search our full set of tutorials, documentation & marketplace offerings and insert the link!
Hello! Is there a hourly limit for e-mail numbers? So for example can I send 1.000 e-mail per hour (newsletter)? Thanks! Gergo
DigitalOcean has publicly stated that they do not impose specific email sending limits, but advise you to remain mindful of your sending rates, to avoid email providers labeling you as a spammer.
That said… these tidbits in the terms may provide some more official context to go by:
Note that the IP address, while assigned to you, is owned by DigitalOcean - so there’s a chance that somebody will file a complaint with DigitalOcean before they file a complaint with you.
The information provided seems to indicate that if you are careful to play by the above rules (and show a trend of doing so), your account will remain in good standing. For extra comfort, though, I’d open a support ticket w/ DigitalOcean directly, so you have an official, documented response.
Cheers, Derik
Disclaimer: I am not a lawyer, nor am I a representative of DigitalOcean. This information is presented as a summary of seemingly reputable sources, not as official standing or legal advice.
Get paid to write technical tutorials and select a tech-focused charity to receive a matching donation.
Full documentation for every DigitalOcean product.
The Wave has everything you need to know about building a business, from raising funding to marketing your product.
Stay up to date by signing up for DigitalOcean’s Infrastructure as a Newsletter.
New accounts only. By submitting your email you agree to our Privacy Policy
Scale up as you grow — whether you're running one virtual machine or ten thousand.
Sign up and get $200 in credit for your first 60 days with DigitalOcean.*
*This promotional offer applies to new accounts only.