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Indirect javascript mandate letter
An indirect javascript mandate letter,
which may also be called an email-address mandate letter,
is a letter that is sent to a website-owner or forum-software-maker by a domestic intelligence agency.
The types of websites that are targetted with such letters include forum-websites,
wiki-websites, and webmail-websites, among others.
The letter orders the website-owner to make registration on the website dependent upon
providing an email-address which must be confirmed.
The reason that this is significant is that all webmail-websites have been forcibly
made javascript-dependent by the NSA and its international allies.
The last clearweb webmail-website that was not javascript-dependent was hidemyass.com,
which the NSA commandeered via a javascript mandate letter in mid 2017.
The last darkweb webmail-website that was not javascript-dependent was secmail [secure mail],
which the NSA destroyed via a QUANTUM perma-DDoS attack in late 2020.
Even after all of that, there was still the non-javascript-dependent,
minimally-functional webmail-website mailcatch.com,
which allowed only publicly-accessible receive-only accounts,
which stored incoming emails for only a few minutes,
though the NSA's indirect javascript-mandate letters typically specified that
email-addresses from mailcatch.com must not be accepted,
so mailcatch.com was more-often-than-not useless for account-registrations.
But, in mid 2025, the innately psychopathic individuals within the NSA
became intolerant of even THAT little bit of freedom,
so they made a DDoS-and-mandate attack upon mailcatch.com,
giving it a javascript mandate.
The recentness of that attack demonstrates the ongoing ever-worsenning nadir.
Thus, to mandate an email-address is to mandate javascript.
The javascript serves to violate the privacy of everyone who uses the website.
Of course, a person's ISP email-address is highly non-private,
so there is no sense in using that instead of webmail.
Indirect javascript mandate letters typically include a gag-order,
which forbids the recipient of the letter from telling other people that they have received the letter.
An indirect javascript mandate may additionally be accompanied by one or more other types of mandates.