Yes. I’m not sure about speed, but syntactically they are far superior and better for all cases, unless of course you’re wanting to pass templates as an input, but that’s pretty obvious.
I think you’re right, but you may be missing why companies do this and which companies do it. It’s a public relations effort and a legal security. They are protecting themselves from media scandals and lawsuits, and nothing more. I am not being cynical. These are corporate firms managed by a board of investors.
So the extent of such efforts is dependent on the companies’ priorities. If a company is not turning a sufficient surplus in the first place, profit will be higher on their priority list. Otherwise, security will be higher, relatively speaking.
Yes. The Cold War and the resulting pro-business/anti-government ethos that pervades America creates a situation in which people blame each other for everything that goes wrong instead of blaming their leaders or the ruling class. When they lose their job, they don’t consider that in most countries they would have either not lost their job or they would have began receiving a healthy sustenance from the government.
The “economic rights” category is awkward. There is no justifying delineation for this. The reality is poor people don’t have equal rights and never have. Poor people don’t even have basic rights, no matter how hard they work or how valuable they are to society. Poor people are not even allowed to cooperate with one another in mutual sacrifice of their own labor. This is just basic human rights, not a special category.
Very easy to deploy, but keeping it off of blacklists is still a neverending goose-chase that you can’t win. If you actually plan to depend on this mail server, this path will fail you.
It’s sad, really, because it’s a really cool package. It manages it’s own DNS and everything. But it’s just not enough.