T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1365.1 | courtesy is better then policy | CVG::THOMPSON | Semper Gumby | Tue Feb 05 1991 12:27 | 23 |
| > Is it contrary to any policy (if so, which one) to forward Electronic
> MAIL messages without the originator's permission?
No. As long as the author's name is attached and any security notations
are adhered to E-mail may be forwarded.
> Surely it is against policy (as opposed to courtesy) to forward MAIL
> without asking permission?
Nope. Should it be? I don't think so.
> As a silly example, a MAIL message could be forwarded to an @WORLD
> distribution (as long as the originator's name was included) which is
> surely more heinous than entering it into a NOTES conference?
The largest mailing list I've had was just over 3300 names. I suspect
more people will see this note then that. The biggest difference
between a mailing list and a Notes conference is that the names of the
people who get the mail is known. The same can not be said about Notes.
Alfred
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1365.2 | At TANDEM you can direct E-mail to everyone | SVBEV::VECRUMBA | Peters J. Vecrumba @NYO | Tue Feb 05 1991 13:10 | 11 |
| re .-1 and "@WORLD"
> The largest mailing list I've had was just over 3300 names. I suspect
> more people will see this note then that. The biggest difference
> between a mailing list and a Notes conference is that the names of the
> people who get the mail is known. The same can not be said about Notes.
At TANDEM, they still have a "@TANDEM" which is every employee, top
to bottom. I seem to remember something around 10,000 names.
/petes
|
1365.3 | little companies vs big ones | CVG::THOMPSON | Semper Gumby | Tue Feb 05 1991 14:48 | 7 |
| > At TANDEM, they still have a "@TANDEM" which is every employee, top
> to bottom. I seem to remember something around 10,000 names.
Yes you can do that at small companies. Digital is about an order of
magnitude larger though. And there is no @DIGITAL.DIS.
Alfred
|
1365.4 | If need be | BOLT::MINOW | The best lack all conviction, while the worst | Tue Feb 05 1991 14:51 | 8 |
| Yes you can do that at small companies. Digital is about an order of
magnitude larger though. And there is no @DIGITAL.DIS.
I could generate one from the ELF database in a few hours (if I was
given direct access to the database) or days (if I had to use the
VTX interface).
Martin.
|
1365.6 | distinctive difference: mailing lists & VTX | SMOOT::ROTH | Nada today. | Tue Feb 05 1991 22:43 | 9 |
| a nit:
Livewire (VTX) isn't quite the same as mail, just as a newspaper
isn't the same as paper mail. Sending a mail usually guarantees an
audience, VTX doesn't.
Also, will the livewire folkes accept and display any kind of
random message from j-random employee (like a mail distrubution
list will)?
|
1365.7 | Only consistency = inconsistencies! | MACNAS::MGRAHAM | As user-friendly as a cornered rat | Wed Feb 06 1991 03:19 | 25 |
| Re: .1
Alfred,
Thanks for your response!
So it seems as though there is no POLICY against a MAIL forward. This
seems inconsistent (so what else is new!).
As to your statement as follows:
> The biggest difference
> between a mailing list and a Notes conference is that the names of the
> people who get the mail is known. The same can not be said about Notes.
Most forwarded MAIL message I receive have distributions like "@xyz".
It would take the skills and persistence of a Sherlock Holmes to
discover the names behind every ".dis" file - plus what guarantee is
there that one of the forwarders didn't amend the file subsequent to
the transmission? And there may not be an "audit trail" to find out
who did receive the message.
Ah well!
Mike
|
1365.8 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Semper Gumby | Wed Feb 06 1991 08:32 | 10 |
| RE: .7 True a reciever does not know who else recieved the mail
but they do know who sent it. At various times in the past I've
been quite successful at tracking down originators of mailings.
This can generally be done with the request that corrected news
be sent down the same paths as the first message. It's much easier
then with Notes. Of course the intent of the policy statement that
the name of an author must be retained in both forwardings and
Notes postings is to short cut the need for detective work.
Alfred
|
1365.9 | @DIGITAL.DIS | SICML::LEVIN | My kind of town, Chicago is | Wed Feb 06 1991 18:08 | 25 |
| Re: earlier: (paraphrased)
< There's no such thing as DIGITAL.DIS
No, but there IS a close appoximation, and that's a process used by Corporate
Telecom, which sends messages out to area routers which in turn gets distributed
to "ALL USERS AT NODE xxxxx". Couple of comments, though:
This tends to be mainly an ALL-IN-1 mailing, so it misses a WHOLE LOT
of people, probably including many readers of this conference.
Even if it DID get to everyone, it's still not a specific list of
recipients by name.
On another topic: to me, there's a big difference in forwarding mail to a huge
list (impolite and injudicious perhaps) and posting in a NOTES conference. In
the mail case, at least the recipients are defined, however loosely, and in
most cases are restricted to legitimate E-net accounts (disregarding the
possibility of sending mail via gateays to other external networks). The mail
is sent at a given point in time.
Posting into a conference, on the other hand, makes it available forever, to be
read by anyone, including someone who might gain access to the network. I
consider the security risk of someone reading a notes conference to be far
greater than the risk of someone getting information via mail, so I have no
problem with what's been described earlier as an "inconsistency".
/Marvin
|
1365.10 | more than you wanted to know | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | God is their co-pilot | Wed Feb 06 1991 21:38 | 54 |
| We've looked at this topic before. See 842 "Digital has a crisis in
electronic communication"
Basically, both errors happen:
(1) A message intended for a limited audience (ie a mailing list or
being written into a restricted membership VAX Notes Conference)
receives a much wider audience than was intended by the author.
(2) A message intended for "all employees", "please pass this on to all
your reports", or Livewire, is in fact, not see by all employees.
The source of problem 1, is that a recipient for a mail message has a
"FORWARD" command and doesn't have "PLEASE SUGGEST TO THE ORIGINATING
AUTHOR THAT THIS MESSAGE OUGHT TO HAVE WIDER DISTRIBUTION" command.
Since the forward command is far more convenient, it is used more often
than a message back to the author.
My personal practice and advice is to take care in either the content
or the distribution list, and usually both. Expect your clear and
concise criticism of any Digital project to be forwarded immediately to
the people criticized. Even my managers play that game with me, so I
pull my punches.
The source of problem 2 has been a greater concern to me. It's either
ignorance or arrogance that has the six figure crowd thinking that
there's any ability in this company to effectively and _uniformly_
communicate messages to all employees. I'm speaking here out of a
concern for many alienated customer services employees and even sales
reps who, when it comes to access to electronic mail, VTX, and Notes,
they've been told that the company can't afford it. Maybe not, so
maybe we need that 19th Century relic, the formal official notice board
in the leading vendor of networked computer systems.
My interpretation of the policy in words that are more clear than the
policy itself.
(1) By policy, mail can be forwarded without seeking permission of the
original author. Such forwarding must retain the identity of the
original author. By courtesy, permission should be sought.
By policy, mail cannot be written into a VAX Notes Conference without
the message containing these words "All Employees" or "Wide
Distribution" or without seeking and obtaining the permission of the
original author.
(2) By policy, any note written into a VAX Notes Conference without
restricted membership can be written into any VAX Notes Conference or
mailed. The note must retain the original author, conference and note
identification. By courtesy, permission should be sought.
This is probably a surprise to most people, but I believe this is the
correct interpretation of the policy.
|
1365.11 | _timely_ knowledge = power = empowerment | SA1794::CHARBONND | Iraqi terrorist seagulls? | Thu Feb 07 1991 15:56 | 21 |
| re .10
> (2) A message intended for "all employees", "please pass this on to all
> your reports", or Livewire, is in fact, not see by all employees.
> The source of problem 2 has been a greater concern to me. It's either
> ignorance or arrogance that has the six figure crowd thinking that
> there's any ability in this company to effectively and _uniformly_
> communicate messages to all employees. I'm speaking here out of a
> concern for many alienated customer services employees and even sales
> reps who, when it comes to access to electronic mail, VTX, and Notes,
> they've been told that the company can't afford it.
I'd be inclined to guess it's a lack of real concern or desire to
to so. I think _every employee_ should have access to those media.
How does upper management expect, for instance, DELTA_IDEAS to
work when so many employees have no access to it ?
It seems shameful to me that a company with the capability to
set the standard for in-house communication fails to do so - a
case of the 'cobbler's children having no shoes.'
|
1365.12 | Others use our products better :-( | SVBEV::VECRUMBA | Peters J. Vecrumba @NYO | Thu Feb 07 1991 20:53 | 17 |
| re .11
> It seems shameful to me that a company with the capability to
> set the standard for in-house communication fails to do so - a
> case of the 'cobbler's children having no shoes.'
I've been making the case in our local notes file about this. Right now,
MTS routing (ALL-IN-1 corporate E-mail <-> VAXmail) is done as a favor
in our area; heavier use (i.e., "official" use) would probably incur an
internal cost-per-employee price. On the other hand, if "distribute to all"
really worked, you could get notices in a timely manner. (And probably save
some disk space from not having memos multiply as they go down the chain.)
That was an interesting question about LIVE WIRE - I wonder, too, if that's
the "send to @DIGITAL.DIS".
/Peters
|
1365.13 | DELTA is for everyone . . . | CAPNET::CROWTHER | Maxine 276-8226 | Fri Feb 08 1991 08:46 | 14 |
| Speaking for DELTA - we welcome ideas in any form, yes even mailed, if
you have no access to a terminal. We are a very efficient and
automated organization and the internal network supports us well.
But I will make a committment that every idea that is sent to us will
be handled. We have typed in ideas before, we have worked with folks
who have used other peoples terminals.
This program is for every Digital employee, not just those with
terminals.
Our Mail Address is
IDEAS CENTRAL
OGO1-2/P04
|