> Do you need an address to contact people on? You'll must make sure that the user can read the emails sent to that by you. Do you merely use it as a login-handle?
Pretty humongous dick move to use someone else's email address as one's own login for some website, wouldn't you agree? What if it's a popular website, and the owner of the address would like to use it for their id; why should anyone else be able to deprive them of that?
And thus it's also a dick move from the site operator to allow those dicks to do that. So no, it doesn't depend: Just don't accept untested email addresses for anything.
Not all web-applications with a login are open for registration. Not all are public. Not all are "landgrab". Not all have thousands of users or hundreds of registrations a week. Not all are web applications and not all require email validation.
Some do. But, like your niche example proves: the business-case and constraints matter. There's no one size fits all.
Pretty humongous dick move to use someone else's email address as one's own login for some website, wouldn't you agree? What if it's a popular website, and the owner of the address would like to use it for their id; why should anyone else be able to deprive them of that?
And thus it's also a dick move from the site operator to allow those dicks to do that. So no, it doesn't depend: Just don't accept untested email addresses for anything.