Proof of delivery

The Florida Bar Recommends All Lawyers Use RMail for Registered Email Tracking and Proof of Delivery

December 17, 2017 / in Blog / by Zafar Khan, RPost CEO

5-Star Reviews for Sale! As Tech Essentials readers hunker down for holiday online shopping, it’s a good time to remind you what to consider before you make that final click to purchase. Do you trust the reviews you read online and believe all the comments when they are all overwhelmingly positive and the product has hundreds of […]

How Can You Prove What Really Happened Behind Closed Doors?

June 15, 2017 / in Blog / by Zafar Khan, RPost CEO

Can we ever know what happened in a meeting behind closed doors, with no recording devices and no third party witnesses? Probably not. Is email a clearer way to communicate a complex message? Not always….

Is Proof of Delivery of Service by Email Needed If You Have A Certificate of Service for Email Sent?

January 17, 2013 / in Blog / by Zafar Khan, RPost CEO

Is proof of delivery of Service by Email needed if you have a Certificate of Service for email sent? Considerations with Florida Mandatory Serve by Email Rule. The following is a response to a lawyer question prompted by a recent Florida Bar member benefit email referencing the new Florida mandatory Service by Email Rules of Judicial Administration.

Litigation Counsel Guide: How to Prove Service of Court Documents by Email – Update

December 07, 2012 / in Blog / by Zafar Khan, RPost CEO

This posting should serve as a reference guide for process servers or lawyers who need to prove service by email. (1) Serve by email

RPost Granted Three Patents on Most Fundamental Method of Tracking Email Delivery & Opening

July 24, 2012 / in Blog / by Zafar Khan, RPost CEO

RPost has been granted three additional patents (US Patent numbers 8,224,913; 8,209,389 and 8,161,104) which comprehensively cover systems and methods service providers use to track email opening, delivery or failure using server logs and web beacons – technology novel in 1999 when RPost first filed for the patents, but widely used today.