T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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744.1 | write only what you don't mind your boss seeing | CVG::THOMPSON | Notes? What's Notes? | Wed Mar 08 1989 10:03 | 35 |
| > FWIW, I have been told that ANY mail (especially from managers,
> anyone in perceived authority) is fair game for posting in a notes
> file WITHOUT permission.
First off, this is most assuridly *NOT* the case. It is wrong wrong
wrong to post any mail that is not implisitly or explicitly clearly
indicated as for general consumption in a Notes conference. If you
post private mail WITHOUT the senders permission almost all good
moderators will return it to you ASAP. This is not a nice thing to
do. There is alot of discussion about this in the Etiquette conference
at HUMAN::ETIQUETTE. (Hit KP7 to add)
People have been recieving mail warning them about making entries
in conferences as long as there have been conferences. I have gotten
my share in my time. I usually concider who sent it, what there reason
for sending it was, and what Note it was in relationship to. Mail
that appears mearly threatening I tend to ignore. Mail regarding notes
that are in contriversial conferences on contriversial issues does
cause me to re-read what I wrote though.
Some people have made comments in conferences that were clearly
carrier limiting. Admitting to illegal or unethical activity for
example. Other people have made remarks about their managers which
while they may be true and valid are not likely to inder them with
said manager. This can be said to be a career limiting move as
even if one wins that battle it will make other managers more, how
shall I say this, careful when dealing with that person. There are
battles better fought in private then in public.
It's been suggested on more then one occasion and by more then one
person that people should regard every Notes they write as being
part of there resume. If you don't want your name associated with
something you say then think twice before you say it.
Alfred
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744.2 | has anyone else heard of this? | PERVAX::THOMPSON | | Wed Mar 08 1989 11:09 | 8 |
|
My question is - how prevalent is it that someone posting in a
notes file is sent mail saying not to say any more? I understand
if it is an opinion about an individual but what about a program
(i.e. plan A or SAVE)?
Patti
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744.3 | It happens -- see 743.5, paragraph 2 | TIXEL::ARNOLD | Batteries not included | Wed Mar 08 1989 11:50 | 1 |
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744.4 | Just what exactly are you looking for? | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Wed Mar 08 1989 15:39 | 5 |
| If you're looking for horror stories, rest assured that there are
some, but they certainly aren't going to be mentioned here, now
are they?
DEC may be a superlative company, but it's employees are only human!
|
744.5 | .0 is correct; the reciepient mail is the owner | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Wed Mar 08 1989 17:19 | 27 |
|
>> FWIW, I have been told that ANY mail (especially from managers,
>> anyone in perceived authority) is fair game for posting in a notes
>> file WITHOUT permission.
> First off, this is most assuridly *NOT* the case. It is wrong wrong
> wrong to post any mail that is not implisitly or explicitly clearly
> indicated as for general consumption in a Notes conference.
Actually, the first statement is TRUE in the eyes of personnel, although
it is NOT CONSIDERED GOOD NOTES ETIQUETTE. We had a case in a file that I
moderate where the other moderator sent someone some mail in an attempt
to put some water on the flames that person was fueling, and the person
posted that mail in the file. Let's just say that personal was
consulted (both the moderator's personal person and the noter's
personal person) and both personal people said (independently of
talking to one another) that the receiver of the mail is the owner, and
has the right to so with it what he or she pleases, so long as it isn't
some kind of restricted distribution. I didn't believe it either until
I heard it with my own ears.
Now, that having been said, while you might have the RIGHT to do that,
it is not considered very polite to re-post or forward something with
out the author's permission, and in the case that it is mail from your
manager, I think that doing so could be considered real UNWISE.
Deb
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744.6 | I hate when people make silly differences... | STAR::MFOLEY | Rebel without a Clue | Thu Mar 09 1989 00:28 | 14 |
|
RE: .5
Then people who are discussing potentially hot topics in Mail
should set their Mail Personal Name to "Restricted Distribution
ONLY" and then see what Personnel has to say.
Personnel is WRONG in this instance. The difference between a mail
message and a letter is the media it is stored on. (Paper .vs.
Magnetic)
mike
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744.7 | not agreeing with/liking something <> wrong | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Thu Mar 09 1989 16:20 | 11 |
| Mike,
we might not like what personnel said about it, but the fact is, my
personnel rep researched it (although I don't remember the exact policy
number); that doesn't make personnel WRONG and the statement had nothing
to do with the medium that it was stored on (paper of elecronic); the
point was that the instant that it left you (either via the key that you
hit to send it or the mailbox you dropped it into), it ceased to be
yours and became "owned" by the recipient.
Deb
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744.8 | | EAGLE1::EGGERS | Tom, VAX & MIPS architecture | Thu Mar 09 1989 16:58 | 5 |
| Re: .7
Note that .7 is consistent with what happens if you drop something into
the U.S. Mail. The person who gets it, owns it. To what extent a
copyright is retained is a different matter.
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744.9 | If you send it to me, then I own it. | DWOVAX::YOUNG | Sharing is what Digital does best. | Thu Mar 09 1989 20:48 | 13 |
| Yes this notion that "You cannot post anything you receive with
out the authors permission" is a self-serving myth that has been
drummed up on the Enet over the past year by the more heavy-handed
moderators. It provides a degree of protection to the rantings
of many of the higher placed management and engineers of this company
that they have neither earned nor deserve.
If someone sends you something that is not job related and marked
"Restricted Distribution", "Eyes only", "Personal and Confidential",
or somesuch, then friends you OWN IT. Upon reciept, the adressee is
the owner of and is completely repsonsible for non-confidential
communications. The same thing is true of postings in non-restricted
notes files. Whether it is on paper or electrons means nothing.
|
744.10 | | HOCUS::KOZAKIEWICZ | Shoes for industry | Thu Mar 09 1989 23:40 | 8 |
| re: -1
What logical distinction can be made between mail sent to you marked
"restricted distribution" and entries in restricted conferences?
I sure don't see any.
Al
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744.11 | Personnel? | COUNT0::WELSH | Tom Welsh, UK ITACT CASE Consultant | Fri Mar 10 1989 09:23 | 15 |
| re .5:
Whyever would one ask Personnel?
If I had to name a group within DEC which was least likely to use or understand
Notes, I would probably pick Personnel.
This may seem a bit pedantic, but I think of the Notes culture as one of my
favourite aspects of DEC, and also as one of the reasons for our success.
Notes culture is antithetical to paternalism and hierarchy - and handed-down
rulings. That's why I feel that everyone should do their best to keep
Personnel OUT of Notes. OK, so now they know it exists, we blew it - but let's
not aggravate matters by inviting them to tell us how to use Notes!
--Tom
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744.12 | What would you do? | EXIT26::STRATTON | I (heart) my wife | Fri Mar 10 1989 09:35 | 15 |
| re .11 and "Whyever would one ask Personnel?"
Suppose I wrote a note in a conference that annoyed you
for some reason (say, I insulted your religious beliefs,
you, your family, something like that). Suppose further
that you contacted me, then the conference moderators,
and neither I nor the moderators were willing to remove
the note.
What would you do next?
I suspect that in most cases, an individual in this situation
would turn to Personnel.
Jim Stratton
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744.13 | | JOET::JOET | Question authority. | Fri Mar 10 1989 09:56 | 25 |
| re .12
> re .11 and "Whyever would one ask Personnel?"
>
> Suppose I wrote a note in a conference that annoyed you for some reason
> (say, I insulted your religious beliefs, you, your family, something
> like that). Suppose further that you contacted me, then the conference
> moderators, and neither I nor the moderators were willing to remove the
> note.
>
> What would you do next?
As a grownup (and, apparently, speaking only for myself these days) I'd
either:
A) Ignore it.
or
B) Write a rebuttal in the same conference that it appeared.
Then again, I'm the kind of guy whose first response to a boring
TV show is to change the channel, not to call the station.
-joe tomkowitz
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744.14 | send out invitations... | IAMOK::KOSKI | I'd rather be in Winter Haven | Fri Mar 10 1989 10:33 | 27 |
| re .11
On the contrary Tom, I think if more personnel people involved
themselves in the real world of DEC, Notes being a big part of that
real world, they might be in a better position of understanding
their customer base, the employees.
I find the gross generalizations of personnel people offensive at
time, but have to admit they are not always without merit. As a
personnel person myself I can only hope there are others who can
look outside their 4 walls and get a grip on what the real concerns
of the employees are. One way to do that is through Notes.
>That's why I feel that everyone should do their best to keep
>Personnel OUT of Notes.
Responses from personnel to issues in this file are helpful to us
all. Wanting to exclude the very people that might be able to provide
answers to questions raised here sounds quite counterproductive.
This file is an exchange of ideas, not just a sounding board. What
good are you doing by just bitching amongst yourselves. None of
course, the issues raised here are valid and need to be addressed
by someone that can do something about them. That someone often
resides in a personnel function.
Gail
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744.15 | I like it without them, thank you | CVMS::DOTEN | Right theory, wrong universe. | Fri Mar 10 1989 11:51 | 6 |
| The only thing that worries me about Personnel getting to understand
conferences and what they are used for is that the first thing they
would probably do is create Notes Policies and Procedures manual. Not a
pleasant thought.
-Glenn-
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744.16 | | EAGLE1::BRUNNER | VAX & MIPS Architecture | Fri Mar 10 1989 12:18 | 26 |
| Sounds like maybe we need a topic on the presence of Digital Personnel
in Digital notes? :-)
re: .14
> Responses from personnel to issues in this file are helpful to us
> all. Wanting to exclude the very people that might be able to provide
> answers to questions raised here sounds quite counterproductive.
>
Poll: how many people in the last 6 months have got their questions
answered correctly by any of the following: DEC personnel, the IRS, or
their accountant? Which of the three has answered the most questions
correctly?
> This file is an exchange of ideas, not just a sounding board. What
> good are you doing by just bitching amongst yourselves. None of
> course, the issues raised here are valid and need to be addressed
> by someone that can do something about them.
> That someone often
> resides in a personnel function.
That's it! I think you stated the problem perfectly. :-)
|
744.17 | Start a new note to discuss Personnel | RADVAX::THOMPSON | | Fri Mar 10 1989 13:54 | 5 |
| What do the last few replys have to do with this topic? If you
want to discuss Personnel, please start a new topic note.
Patti
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744.18 | | ALIEN::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Fri Mar 10 1989 14:27 | 20 |
| Re .9:
> Yes this notion that "You cannot post anything you receive with
> out the authors permission" is a self-serving myth that has been
It is "should not", not "cannot", and it is etiquette rather than
regulation.
> If someone sends you something that is not job related and marked
> "Restricted Distribution", "Eyes only", "Personal and Confidential", or
> somesuch, then friends you OWN IT.
That's not true. One way to make that perfectly clear is to write up a
message at home, on one's own time and paper. In that case, the author
owns the copyrights to it. If they then come in to Digital and send
the message to a person, the author still retains all of the
copyrights.
-- edp
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744.19 | | DWOVAX::YOUNG | Sharing is what Digital does best. | Fri Mar 10 1989 19:25 | 37 |
| Re .18:
> > Yes this notion that "You cannot post anything you receive with
> > out the authors permission" is a self-serving myth that has been
>
> It is "should not", not "cannot", and it is etiquette rather than
> regulation.
It is stated by hte moderators who believe in their right to gratuitous
censorship as "MAY NOT". And their practice has given it the effect
of regulation in those conferences, not courtesy. Etiquette is
a matter of choice, which this policy has often not allowed.
> That's not true. One way to make that perfectly clear is to write up a
> message at home, on one's own time and paper. In that case, the author
> owns the copyrights to it. If they then come in to Digital and send
> the message to a person, the author still retains all of the
> copyrights.
Wrong, Eric. The receiver now owns that copy. "Copyright" refers
to the commercial rights to creative content. If I buy a book I
do own that book, but I do not own the copyrights to that book (ie.
the right to copy it for commerical purposes, or in ways that might
evade the copyright owners commercial rights.) It does not however
preclude all copying of material. The vast majority of all
communications by us in this country (and in the whole world) are
never copyrighted. Indeed much of it is (and has been judged) as
unworthy of being copyrighted, if for no other reason than lack
of creative content.
Finally, even copyrighted material may be used, without permission,
for various purposes; reviews, news, courts, and for the examination
of issues of public concern. The copyright is meant to protect
the commercial rights of the creator. It is not meant to protect
people who issue asinine missives from public exposure.
-- Barry
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744.20 | Three can keep a secret, if two of them are dead ... | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Sic Biscuitus Disintegratum | Fri Mar 10 1989 20:10 | 34 |
| < Note 744.19 by DWOVAX::YOUNG "Sharing is what Digital does best." >
> of issues of public concern. The copyright is meant to protect
> the commercial rights of the creator. It is not meant to protect
> people who issue asinine missives from public exposure.
>
> -- Barry
Very succinctly put.
Copyrights and the right to privacy are entirely different. Where
copyrights are legislated for strictly commercial reasons, the "right
to privacy" is what everyone seems to be arguing here. Many courts
have found that the "right of privacy" of an individual is very often
contingent upon the diligence of the individual in protecting his
own privacy. For instance, you can't take a bath in open view on
your own property and decry anyone who happens to see you as a
"Peeping Tom". You have to take some measure to prevent others
from invading your privacy by casual actions. The same holds
true for written correspondence, telephone calls, and other forms
of personal communications. Simply reference the federal laws on
wiretapping, and you will find that BOTH parties in a telephone
call have the independent right to record and use the conversation,
with or without notice to the other party!
I don't think that it's polite to publish something that you may
have received as a private communication that you feel might cause
embarrassment or hardship to the person who wrote it. That person
would have every right not to trust you with sensitive personal
information again. But I don't think it's a criminal offense either.
When someone volunteers information to you, without any agreed-upon
restrictions, the information is your to do with as you will.
Geoff
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744.21 | | MU::PORTER | what's in a name? | Fri Mar 10 1989 22:48 | 17 |
| What's all this stuff about what you "can" and "can't" do in
a notesfile?
No-one knows except us.
We are the citizens of notedom (Notre Dom?), and if you've got this
far then you probably know more about how the system should be working
than those who merely pontificate as outsiders.
So if "we" say that it's offensive to post material without the
express permission of the originator, then that's how it's going
to be. Isn't that how democracy works? Yes, there will be
disagreements. But the will of the people shall prevail.
OK, so the rhetoric was over-inflated, but you get the gist,
no? Stop worrying about people telling you what you can and can't do,
and just behave decently.
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744.22 | | ALIEN::POSTPISCHIL | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Sun Mar 12 1989 10:33 | 49 |
| Re .19:
> It is stated by hte moderators who believe in their right to gratuitous
> censorship as "MAY NOT". And their practice has given it the effect
> of regulation in those conferences, not courtesy.
Well then, if it is regulation, it is not the myth you said it was.
> Wrong, Eric. The receiver now owns that copy.
I am not wrong, because I said "copyright", not "copy". The author
owns the copyrights. The receiver owns one copy, and one copy only.
That copy may be transformed into another version if that is
appropriate for its use (e.g., printed once for reading). It may not
be copied generally otherwise, such as posting it to a conference.
> "Copyright" refers to the commercial rights to creative content.
"Copyright" refers to the right to copy, and the copyright law
explicitly applies to unpublished works, including those not for
commercial purposes.
> It does not however preclude all copying of material.
It precludes ALL copying EXCEPT that permitted by the copyright law,
e.g. copying when necessary for use (as copying a program into main
memory for execution), copying for appropriate educational purposes,
copying short excerpts, et cetera. Posting to Notes conferences is not
mentioned in the copyright law.
> The vast majority of all communications by us in this country (and in
> the whole world) are never copyrighted.
That is a common misconception. EVERY work which can be protected by
copyrights IS protected by copyrights the moment it is written (unless
prior written contract provides otherwise) and continuing until the
moment the copyright expires or is nullified (as by publication without
copyright notice or by explicit submission to the public domain).
> Finally, even copyrighted material may be used, without permission,
> for various purposes; reviews, news, courts, and for the examination of
> issues of public concern.
As I said, Notes is not included. Patents have strict requirements for
creativity; copyrights are more liberal. That's one reason "Happy
Birthday" is protected by copyright.
-- edp
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744.23 | | HANNAH::LEICHTERJ | Jerry Leichter | Sun Mar 12 1989 14:34 | 19 |
| Following up on .22 - which basically gets the facts of copyright law correct
(and if anything the recent approval by the US of the Berne Convention makes
the regulations even stricter), there is a more fundamental issue here: Some
authors of previous notes seem to believe that the "author owns the writing"
policy is an invention of notesfile moderators for their convenience in the
new electronic age. False. The general convention for PAPER letters has always
been that their ownership, to a large extent, remains with the author. It is
NOT transferred to the recipient. Common rules of practice - ettiquette -
have generally forbidden direct use of material from privately posted letters
without the permission of the author. That's why things like contest descrip-
tions usually say explicitly that entries become the property of the organiza-
tion running the contest.
In most cases, these questions are never raised in court, so the law remains
fuzzy. But cases do arise, as when the estates of famous people try to get
back copies of the letters those people sent out during their lifetime. They
often succeed, though I'm sure the law here is very unsettled.
-- Jerry
|
744.24 | Sometimes there are good reasons for getting personnel involved | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Tue Mar 14 1989 11:50 | 22 |
| RE: .11
>Whyever would one ask Personnel?
Without getting into the details of the specific situation, a new
reader (and new employee, I might add), came into a particular
conference, did some name calling, enraged the most participants in
that conference, and when nicely asked to tone down the postings by a
moderator, declared that the moderator's act was one of discrimination
and harassment, and informed that moderator that the moderators were
being brought to personnel. Well, when someone tells you that they are
taking you to personnel, the intelligent thing to do is to gather all of
your facts and go see your personnel rep ASAP, regardless of whether the
charges are legitimate (and in this case, personnel said that they
weren't). This particular question came up in the course of telling our
personnel rep what went on.
I'm really sorry to see all of the personnel bashing that is going on in
this note. My rep is real good, he's gone the extra yard for me several
times.
Deb
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744.25 | NOT Career Limiting | BACKSD::MEIER | harrY | Tue Apr 18 1989 18:43 | 17 |
| Re: .0
No, i have not found that posting notes, even on a sensitive
topic, results in "don't do it - it's career limiting" mail.
I was active in the discussion of Plan A back in Note 565. I
never received any threatening mail. On the contrary, i received
a steady flow of very supportive mail. I also received many
supportive phone calls and personal visits.
It's O.K. to discuss tough questions or sensitive issues. In
fact, it's good to do so. The only thing to avoid is being
irrational or otherwise unprofessional. Avoid personal attacks
and harassment. Be sure to follow Digital's policies on employee
conduct and valuing differences.
But by all means, participate. -- harrY
|