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Well, yes, I WAS thinking of you when I conceived the post, but not only you. There are one or two other people who've replied to my new newsletter, saying that they appreciate the fact that I now provide a plain text only version of it. :-)
The problem with plain text, from a marketers perspective (although I suspect that you as the reader would consider that a GOOD thing) is that if you read my e-mails in plain text, I can't tell that you opened it in my reporting.
That's because all mailing list providers include a 1-pixel invisible image in the HTML e-mails they send, linked with a URL that's unique to you, and if that image is "displayed" on your computer, my reporting says you "opened" my e-mail.
Most mailing list providers actually suggest you periodically prune your subscribers, based on people who've never opened an e-mail from you. I used to do that, until I realised that a lot of people might actually be reading my e-mails in plain text, and unless they reply, I'd never know they were, in fact, carefully reading everything I send.
Nonetheless, this reporting thing is one reason why many mailing list providers DO default to the "You've received an e-mail, but it's HTML, so please click here to view it": if you click to view it, it DOES count as an open for purposes of reporting.


I hear you. I tend to leave "Retrieving images" off by default in my mail client, and when I get an e-mail from someone I know I subscribed to, I'll add them to my Safe Senders list so it always loads the images from them.
Also because I know how it works behind the scenes, I want those people to see which of their mails I'm opening, so that a) they don't purge me from their list without my knowing, for being a non-opener, and b) [something I've also just started playing with myself, but another powerful feature from the marketer's perspective] they can make business decisions and add me into different automation sequences, based on which mails I've opened.
If I didn't sign up to receive e-mails from someone, I definitely do not want them knowing I've opened their e-mail. That's not really possible on webmail and mobile e-mail clients, though. :/

One thing that really annoys me is WordPress. They used to have a really useful service where people could reply to a blog post by filling in their name and address and a few other things on a form. They would send me the data from the form in an e-mail message, which I would save and process with a word processor macro and import straight into a database.
Then they started sending the results in HTML, e-mail, which complicated the process to such an extent that I just deleted them. Finally they made you go to a different web site and jump through lots of hoops to read the results, which were absolutely meaningless and useless, and in any case the notification e-mails were automatically rejected by my reader as "Junk and suspicious mail". So they too just got deleted. I haven't used their forms on any new blog posts, but occasionally people do find a form on an old post.
I'm pretty sure that 99% of the "one pixel" things I get are spam.

I'm pretty sure that 99% of the "one pixel" things I get are spam.
I... think I'm flattered, Steve. That is, if you consider my e-mail to be in the 1%, of course! ;-)


Nowadays, the best way to collect random ad-hoc information like that is Google Forms. It's how my "Favourite Books of All Time" forms were set up - as embedded Google Forms.
Results are saved in a Google Docs Spreadsheet which I can view anytime, and I can also set up the form to e-mail me for each individual reply.
You might want to consider replacing that WordPress form with a Google one, if people are still using it?
My reader can render HTML mails, except for the ones that have idiotic things in the plain text versions like "Your client cannot read HTML mail, get another client". I just delete those.
And also my reader is set not to read "lazy html" -- that is, html that cannot be rendered by the reader itself, but goes to a distant site. These precautions have, at least so far, protected me from ransomware and other nasties lurking around.
If people want me to look at something on a distant site, they should just put in the URL and tell me what they want me to see if I click on it. Problem is that lots of URLs that come in e-mails nowadays at 5-6-7-9 lines long, and so have to be copied and pasted into a browser, because they don't follow the convention of enclosing long URLs in , and when I do copy and paste them, the browser tells me that the site's certificate has expired, so I'm rather glad my reader doesn't open the site automatically.