T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
227.1 | Well? | RDGENG::CORNE | Take 1000 lines - I must do my backups! | Thu Dec 04 1986 12:57 | 9 |
| Some time back there was a long discussion about the rights and
wrongs of someone who intervened in a discussion between two DECpeople.
Any one recognise any of .0?
Any one recognise themself?
Jc
|
227.2 | | HYDRA::ECKERT | Jerry Eckert | Thu Dec 04 1986 13:42 | 2 |
| Sounds like they've been reading "Digital Review"...
|
227.3 | Name that pub! | STAR::MEREWOOD | Richard, ZKO1-1/D42, DTN 381-1429 | Thu Dec 04 1986 17:23 | 3 |
| Being an emigrant from Reading, I'll bet I could name it in one.
Richard.
|
227.4 | I don't get paranoid about these things | DECNA::GOLDSTEIN | Not Insane / Not Responsible | Thu Dec 04 1986 18:14 | 12 |
| Charlie Matco should sue.
The English article is even a bad copy of "Charlie's" style
in Digital Review. He loves to talk about a pub in Bellevue,
Washington. Yeah, right.
Some of his stuff is disinformation which people throw at him.
Some of it is stuff which we couldn't pre-announce but really wouldn't
mind if customers were anxious for. Some of it is real leaks.
Outsiders don't know which is which, either.
I think it's a good funny page.
|
227.5 | | RDGENG::CORNE | Take 1000 lines - I must do my backups! | Fri Dec 05 1986 05:30 | 6 |
| re .4,
Yes, Its the best page in the mag - its got no job ads worth reading
yet...;-)
Jc
|
227.6 | | INK::KALLIS | Support Hallowe'en | Fri Dec 05 1986 09:08 | 27 |
| Re "Disniformation":
_Nobody_ should be talking to a publication except a designated
company representative (Personnel Policies and Procedures 6.28).
"Disinformation" also hurts the company and sours its legitimate
relations with the press.
Re leaks:
Yes, the company is very leaky. Some examples of ways information
can leak out:
Employee discussions in public and semi-public circumstances
(restaurants, pubs, stores, trade shows, etc) of sensitive matters.
Sales personnel who might wish to keep a wavering customer by releasing
information about unannounced products.
Co-Op students who might wish to "make points" with their instructors.
People who, for whatever reason, give outsiders "internal distribution"
documents such as _Sales Update_.
There are _lots_ of ways for information to get out.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
227.7 | | COVERT::COVERT | John Covert | Fri Dec 05 1986 11:13 | 11 |
| > _Nobody_ should be talking to a publication except a designated
> company representative (Personnel Policies and Procedures 6.28).
The policy states that "Any requests for information about a particular
business group should be directed to the appropriate management in that
group."
From time to time, group managers may issue "Party Lines." This information
is public knowledge, and may be released by any employee to anyone.
/john
|
227.8 | Other disclosure source | SKYLAB::FISHER | Burns Fisher 381-1466, ZKO1-1/D42 | Fri Dec 05 1986 13:55 | 7 |
| re .6: Another big source of info: Customers who have been given
non-disclosure presentations, or who have field test h/w or s/w.
We will assume that the customers who talk to the Matco's of the
world are employees who are not aware of the nondisclosure provisions.
Burns
|
227.9 | | INK::KALLIS | Support Hallowe'en | Fri Dec 05 1986 17:00 | 24 |
| Re .7:
Please note that I didn't specify who the designated company
representative should be. However, from Personell Policies and
Procedures 6.30:
"Every employee is responsible for maintaining the confidentiality
of information that could jeopardize Digitral's competitive interests
or patent filings. ..."
"This policy applies to all information presented at seminars,
conferences, industry standards committees, and any other public
forum .... It does not appluy to communications with the press
(Electronic News, Boston Globe, Computer World, Computer Business
Daily, etc.) Press communications must be handled through Digital's
Public Relations Department."
That seems pretty clear.
I also call your attention to policy 6.06, pages 7 - 8, on ways
to handle confidentiality.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
227.10 | | COVERT::COVERT | John Covert | Fri Dec 05 1986 17:26 | 14 |
| re .9
Well, interesting how someone who studies the P&P manual can find a way to
prohibit anything.
It's also interesting that policy 6.28 and 6.30 are so clearly contradictory
of each other, 6.28 stating that general inquiries about the business of the
company must be sent to PR but that specific inquiries about products must
be referred to the project's management, but 6.30 seeming to say that the
PR office has to handle every dealing with the press.
Maybe there's yet another interpretation in this policy mess.
/john
|
227.11 | who do you think I had in mind? | DELNI::GOLDSTEIN | Not Insane / Not Responsible | Fri Dec 05 1986 17:42 | 2 |
| Aw, shucks, Steve, I thought you were the "official" Charlie Matco
fool-him agent, with your Groucho nose and glasses on.
|
227.12 | Easy to Guess! | MOSAIC::GOLDBERG | Marshall R. Goldberg, PCSG | Sun Dec 07 1986 23:36 | 10 |
|
One of the things that strikes me most about rumors is that some
are so self-evident as to be rediculous. Any moron knows Digital
* must * be working on faster VAX computers and new uVAX computers!
It is easy to guess at a number of approaches any good group of
engineers would probably take and put them into print. That is
a good way of 'smoking' some additional information out of folks
who wrongly think the publication has some 'special' knowledge.
|
227.13 | We don't need investigations | GOBLIN::MCVAY | Pete McVay, VRO (Telecomm) | Mon Dec 08 1986 10:50 | 13 |
| re: .12
Not only is the information easy to guess, but it's easy to print as a
guess. The Charlie-Matco-clone talked to some DECcies around a pub,
which is hardly an authoritative source. Anyone who reads that article
and thinks they're getting inside information also must pick stock
quotes from the "National Enquirer" astrology pages.
Before we go off looking for leaks, why not make sure they are leaks.
Julius and Ethel Rosenburg were executed for supposedly passing
information which later turned out to be (1) useless for building
a bomb and (2) common knowledge that any competent nuclear scientist
already knew.
|
227.14 | | INK::KALLIS | Support Hallowe'en | Mon Dec 08 1986 11:29 | 30 |
| Re .10:
Maybe it's not so contradictory as one might think. Suppose there's
an inquiry about a specific product (say, my favorite mythical PDP-13).
1) Suppose it's unannounced.
If that's the case, and someone wants information about it (presuming
anyone who's non-Digital) one would hope the management would be
sensible enough to say something on the order of, "Sorry, no such
product's been announced."
2) Suppose it's been announced (officially, as in press-released).
Then management, usually through a Marketing Communication Manager
can refer it to the appropriate proper channel: press inquiries,
to a Publioc Relations representative; consultant inquiries, to
Consultant Relations; analysts' inquiries to Financial Relations;
and customer inquiries to the appropriate sales/service group.
2a) Suppose it's "announced" (i.e., appears in Sales Update or
equivalent, but hasn't been exposed to the public yet).
If a press inquiry (tracking down a rumor), the best choice is the
Public Relations department. Otherwise, as 1.
What's so "contradictory" about that?
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
227.15 | Firefly is public knowledge | MOLE::BARKER | Jeremy Barker - NAC Europe - REO2-G/K3 | Fri Dec 19 1986 19:16 | 5 |
| The existence of the Firefly multiprocessor mentioned in the quoted article
is public knowledge. I read about how its cacheing system works in an ACM
publication.
jb
|