RPostal

Proof of Receipt with High Evidential Weight

Registered Email™ service provides compliance proof with multiple proof of transmission timestamps, proof of sending, proof delivery, proof of receipt, and proof of opening. Each timestamp is associated with the message content in a self-contained record and can be authenticated with its forensic audit trail.

What is legal delivery? What is the difference between proof of sending, proof of delivery, and proof of receipt?

US law, e-commerce directives in Europe, and international laws of other countries provide that an electronic record is considered received by the intended recipient when it enters an information processing system that the recipient has designated or uses for the purpose of receiving electronic records of the type sent and from which the recipient is able to retrieve the electronic record, and is in a form capable of being processed by that system.

According to the legal analyses of the Uniform Electronic Transaction Act and other laws, legal timestamps for:

  • Proof of sending is the time the message left the sender’s system of control and entered a third-party system with successful transmission to the recipient.
  • Proof of delivery is the time the message left the sender’s system of control, entered a third-party system with successful transmission to the recipient, with the proof of delivery (POD) timestamp being the time of successful onward delivery to the recipient.
  • Proof of delivery is the time the message left the sender’s system of control, entered a third-party system with successful transmission to the recipient, with the proof of receipt (POR) timestamp being the time successful acceptance of the message at a system under control of the recipient (i.e. their email server or email inbox).
  • Proof of opening is the time the message left the sender’s system of control, entered a third-party system with successful transmission to the recipient, with the proof of opening timestamp being the time of successful determination of opening or activation of that message at the recipient inbox.

For email, legal proof of delivery is usually the goal, delivered to the email server authorized to receive mail for the recipient’s address. This might be a corporate mail server or the server of the Internet Service Provider that manages the individual’s mail account. It is important to note that an email message is considered received even if no one is aware of its receipt. That is, as with first class mail, or even certified or registered mail, once the message is delivered it makes no difference whether the addressee opens it.

If delivery to a mail server is delivery, proof of delivery must prove delivery to the recipient’s mail server.

It is sometimes possible, with conventional email technology, to elicit some form of acknowledgment of receipt from a receiving mail server or mail client. But these techniques work only some of the time, and, when they do, at best they can supply the sender with a plain text email acknowledgment that is easily forged or altered and tells nothing of the content of the message. The Registered Email™ patented technology proves delivery by recording the transactions between the Registered Email server and the recipient’s mail server as each message is delivered.

These transactions are a dialog conducted in the Simple Mail Transport Protocol (SMTP) that governs all Internet email communications. This English language protocol requires the recipient mail server to identify itself, declare itself prepared to accept mail on behalf of a named recipient, and acknowledge when the mail has been successfully received. By recording the SMTP dialog (along with other Internet forensics), the Registered Receipt email documents the recipient mail server’s declaration of accepting the mail, or “signature of acceptance from the recipient’s mail room.” For each delivered message, a transcript of the dialog is included in each Registered Email receipt in addition to other information comprising an audit trail of the message’s delivery. Since all Internet mail is delivered via SMTP, the Registered Email service can provide proof of delivery to any Internet destination.

In summary, the four levels of delivery, three being considered “legally received” as defined by the electronic transaction laws and case law, are:

Registered Receipt
  • Delivered: Confirmed Opened
  • Delivered: Minimum Delivery to Mailbox
  • Delivered: Minimum Delivery to Mail Server
  • Delivery Failure

These are analogous to traditional courier and receipt mail service records as noted below.

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Registered Email™ technology is RPost patented.

Contact our integration team to learn more about how you can add Registered Email™, RMail, and RSign services to your workflows.