this post was submitted on 30 Dec 2025
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After 401 years, the Danish postal service has ended letter deliveries as the country fully embraces the digital age.

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[–] Willy@sh.itjust.works 7 points 2 weeks ago (9 children)

In the US you can’t even unsubscribe from the usps according to my letter carrier and their website. I’ve tried just never getting the mail but they end up bundling it up and sticking it in front of your front door.

[–] Lost_My_Mind@lemmy.world 11 points 2 weeks ago (8 children)

Here's what you do. Dig the sidewalk down 50 feet. Just a sudden drop. 200 foot tall fence made of barbed wire and spiked metal. This reaches all the way to the 50 foot drop of the sidewalk.

The sidewalk is public property. So if he throws it down there, it's littering.

The fence is also electrified. Your mailbox is on the front porch. Thete's also random landmines in the yard, and swinging chainsaws being whirled around by pulleys.

Lets see him deliver those weekly savers ads now!

[–] towerful@programming.dev 5 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

Wait, the US doesn't have a free service to (a) remove you from postal spam lists and (b) stop spam being delivered?

In the UK, I registered my address on a few of the things listed here ( https://www.citizensadvice.org.uk/consumer/post-and-parcels/stop-getting-junk-mail/ ). And the only junk mail I now receive are political flyers & takeout menus delivered outside of the postal service (ie by people, not posties).

Do Americans really have to put up with receiving random bullshit with no easy way of stopping it?!

[–] frongt@lemmy.zip 3 points 2 weeks ago

Not really, no, because between letter and bulk mail mailbox delivery, the USPS derives much more revenue from bulk mail.

But, because most people just trash it, most companies have also stopped sending it.

[–] Willy@sh.itjust.works 1 points 2 weeks ago

I thought I heard of a program many years back, but I haven’t been able to find it recently. I’d even pay a small fee.

[–] foodandart@lemmy.zip 1 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

Well, no.. but why refuse junk mail?

That's a resource being sent to you.

It's ok to work out how to use it. Those junk flyers make great barbecue starters, birdcage or catbox liners, packing for when you ship an item, the unprinted backsides of the letters are good to use for shopping lists and small to do notes..

Local grade schools can sometime use the junk mail newsprint for kids arts classes when they have paper mache projects (I've called to ask if they have needs of anything and ended up dropping off reams of that to my nearby school's art teacher..)

The rest of it goes straight away into a dedicated paper recycling bin.

(I even take those ubiquitous plastic shopping bags to the Walmart drop off bins for them.)

[–] towerful@programming.dev 2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

I don't refuse junk mail. I indicate my preference to not have it printed on paper, sent some distance, and hand delivered. I refuse it at the origin, not the destination.
Worst case, the postal service recycles it at origin instead of having to ship it.

Junk mail is junk.
It isn't a resource.
I don't think I've ever received something that meaningfully contributes towards a purchase that I actually want to make.
I buy what I need. I find what I want, I think about if I actually need it, I find local manufacturers, I find local suppliers.
I see if the price difference between local & inter/national is worth the saving (most of the time, it isn't and I'd rather buy from a local manufacturer or supplier, even at twice the price).
Then I decide if I should buy something.

Some paper shipped across the country and shoved through my letterbox is not going to influence my decision AT ALL.
In fact, it's more likely to negatively impact my purchasing decision.
Because here is a company that has excess profits to physical cold-advertise something to me, regardless if I have an interest in it or not.
What a waste of money, resources and time.

[–] foodandart@lemmy.zip 2 points 2 weeks ago

Some paper shipped across the country and shoved through my letterbox is not going to influence my decision AT ALL.

Oh, you and I are identical in that respect. Hate people trying to sell me shit. Am firmly from the "Don't call us, we'll call you.." department.

God's honest, in my late 20's I made the decision to turn my head when ads came on the TV, (refused to view them at all) and by the late 90's when high speed internet rolled out, we cut the cord.

No cable TV by 1999. Fully gone.

Within a few years, I'd found out how to use a hosts file (Dan Pollock's - it's still available) and blocked as much of the ad content I could on the computer. Now I'm rolling with uBO. (and still have Dan's hosts file enabled within it.)

My only exception is for food.

Where I live, we get lots of local grocery store flyers that are still printed on heavyweight newsprint so I'll often check out the produce sections or meat specials.. but that's about it.

Then those go into a stack that either goes to recycling or off to the schools or shops that use the paper - gladly - to pack merchandise for shipping. (bubble wrap has gotten ridiculously priced in the last few years)

The rest gets converted into notepaper or recycled.

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