Blog
Field notes for maritime email control.
Practical posts on delivery proof, archive operations, resilient ship-to-shore messaging, and reducing mail uncertainty at sea.
June 3, 2026
Email delays at sea rarely look like total failure, so crews and shore teams adapt around resend loops, confirmation requests, and unclear delivery timing until friction becomes normal.
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June 2, 2026
Most vessel email systems still work, but small delays, resend loops, and limited delivery visibility can quietly slow daily ship-to-shore operations.
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May 28, 2026
Store-and-forward maritime email helped vessels manage expensive and unstable links, but delayed batch transfers now create friction for modern ship-to-shore operations.
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May 24, 2026
Small delays in maritime email rarely look like total failure, but they create resend loops, attachment uncertainty, and daily friction between vessels and shore offices.
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May 21, 2026
Ship-to-shore email often works eventually, but unclear timing and limited mailbox visibility still create daily confirmation loops.
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May 16, 2026
Email remains one of the simplest ways malware reaches vessels, making maritime email security an operational risk as much as an IT issue.
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May 16, 2026
A sent message is not the same as a message the vessel or shore office can actually retrieve, inspect, and act on.
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