Accelerated Mobile Pages, or short AMP, is software to presumably make websites faster. It was first announced by Google in 2015, and has now been added to Gmail. AMP in an email service makes the emails 'dynamic', at least that's what Google says.

What does AMP in emails achieve?

Basically AMP is putting apps into an email to offer dynamic content: advertisements, shops, questionnaires, and similar content that can be interacted with.

Google's claim that AMP is necessary to make mobile pages load faster is just a marketing pitch. Or as Devin Coldewey puts it: "It’s like someone who sells bottled water telling you your tap runs too slow."

Websites become faster if they

don't load ads,

don't autoplay videos

don't use lots of trackers.

All of this is what Gmail's AMP now wants to do for the websites: load ads, autoplay videos, and track what you click on - directly in your Gmail inbox.

Reasons why AMP is bad

No one asked for AMP, at least not the users. This is not surprising because AMP was never designed to deliver something the users needed, it was designed to enable Google to make Gmail more profitable. Here's why you should reject it:

News will be presented without branding: AMP is an attempt by Google to colonize free platforms such as web and email. Google should not be infrastructure. What does AMP actually do with your mailbox? No ad blocker will help if your emails are delivered through Gmail. Marketers and Google love AMP: Attempt to track you across platforms. Building fast websites is easy: AMP doesn't magically make websites faster. Absence of trackers does. There's a reason why email is still around: One of the best things about emails is that they are persistent. They don't push advertisements into your face, they are always the same. Google is trying to fix something about emails, which isn't even broken.

1. News will be presented without branding

Google's AMP is bad for another reason: As content shown in Google's AMP view is stripped of all branding even fake news will be displayed as if the content were from a legitimate news agency.

This will make the problems we already have with fake news on the web even worse, potentially destroying our democracies.

Google should not have the power to lock content into its platform and display it according to their algorithms. The example of YouTube's clickbait algorithms already shows how harmful this can be.

2. What does AMP actually do with your mailbox?

Instead of visiting websites - where you can block advertisements with an ad-blocker - Gmail now wants to display this content directly in your mailbox, marketing it as an "engaging, interactive, and actionable email experience".

No ad blocker can stop the ads displayed in your Gmail inbox. Obviously, this is not to improve speed, but simply to track you across platforms. It is another colonialist attempt by Silicon Valley to take over the independent email platform.

Email, however, is not an app platform or an ad platform, it is a communication medium. The way it is set up - decentralized and independent, it works well with delivering messages reliably from one person to the other.

3. Marketers and Google love AMP

Marketers, on the other hand, love AMP: It allows them to display their shop directly in your inbox, making it quick and easy for you to buy something you don't actually need at a price that most likely isn't going to be the best offer.

Whenever marketers love something, alarm bells must start chiming. And Google is just another marketer, of course. Google's motive with AMP is very simple: If you don't leave your Gmail inbox for shopping, for social interaction, for booking tickets, Google controls it all.

Right now, you are leaving Gmail to do all these things on the web, and that's infuriating Google. They want to be in charge, and they want to make money with your purchases.

Because let's face it: Dynamic content in email has only one reason - ads. It's Google's business model for offering a free webmail service.

4. Building fast websites is easy

We don't need AMP for fast websites. Building fast websites is easy if you don't load ads, don't autoplay videos, and don't add lots of trackers to your site.

AMP is only necessary to make websites that WANT to add all this make them relatively fast.

5. There's a reason why email is still around

The email protocol was designed decades ago, and as much as everyone is complaining about how outdated it is, everyone is still using it for a very simple reason: It is easy and it works.

It is a fast and easy replacement for sending letters, when using an encrypted email, it is also as secure as a sealed letter. But instead of making encrypted email easy in Gmail, Google is again pushing for advertisement options.

Google now claims that because emails are static, they are bad. But the opposite it true: Only because emails are static, they can function as a replacement of a letter - even in a legal sense. Making it dynamic would destroy this benefit of emails.

Tutanota will not support AMP

At Tutanota we believe in a free and open Internet. AMP is the opposite. Google is trying to lock content into its own system to make a profit with it.

Tutanota will not support AMP. Our business model does not rely on irritating our users with targeted advertisements, but on offering open source emails that users are happy to pay for.

Now is the best time to try Tutanota. We respect your right to privacy and don't post ads to your mailbox. Check here why Tutanota is a great Gmail alternative and particularly why you should use Tutanota for your secure business emails.