Yes, but everybody else has the right to consider me a fool for that.
What unacceptably affects reliability is that I could claim I never
received them since they ended up in the spam folder.
I am sure the law varies around the world, but in the U.S., aside from a
few specific areas like turning off utilities, evictions and court
orders, the sender is presumed to have complied with their requirements
to notify you if other agreements allow for electronic communications
and they made a good faith effort to send to your last known email
address. Most such agreements put it on you to ensure your current
email is on file and that you obviously agree to accept such email from
them.
The fact that you missed it, didn't read it, your spouse or child
deleted it or it was spam filtered will be irrelevant. The same goes
for old fashioned postal mail -- it doesn't affect their legal standing
for sending you the notice even if you claim the mailman lost it, your
mailbox was hit by thieves, your spouse/kids tossed it, etc.
When absolute reliability is required, most will use services
(email/web-based or postal or even hand-delivered) that require a
signature, ID check or other the like. Web tools often have
"return-receipts" that work when you read it after logging in for
example, and the old "you've been served" works well for various legal
issues.
David
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