| By Shelly Palmer | Article Rating: |
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| March 8, 2013 03:01 AM EST | Reads: |
151 |
While the Post Office is trying new ways to save money and deliver mail more efficiently, one Austin startup is taking a very different approach. Outbox wants to take your snail mail, open it, scan it and then digitally deliver it to your computer or iDevice. Three times a week, Outbox collects your mail, then opens, scans, stores and sends it like e-mail. Need a hard copy? Request it within 30 days and they’ll deliver it to you. After that window, the mail is shredded and recycled. Packages still get delivered to your door like normal. Sound convenient and cool for five bucks a month? Definitely, but also creepy. Outbox’s Privacy Policy states that it keeps scanned images of your mail on its servers. That’s sort of scary. But if you’re looking for the added convenience and have given up hope of any sort of privacy in this digital age, keep tabs on Outbox’s trial run in San Francisco. Maybe the USPS could learn a thing or two.
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Published March 8, 2013 Reads 151
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Shelly Palmer is the host of NBC Universal’s Live Digital with Shelly Palmer, a weekly half-hour television show about living and working in a digital world. He is Fox 5′s (WNYW-TV New York) Tech Expert and the host of United Stations Radio Network’s, MediaBytes, a daily syndicated radio report that features insightful commentary and a unique insiders take on the biggest stories in technology, media, and entertainment.

