T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2526.1 | Treat It As You Would Paper Mail... | MSDOA::JENNINGS | First Gennifer Flowers... Now Us! | Mon Jun 07 1993 09:19 | 10 |
| How can you differentiate this from a manager (or any other employee)
who delegates his/her secretary to open their paper mail? Seems to
me this is the manager's prerogative. If you are sending something
via electronic mail and indeed want it to be confidential, then state
that in the subject line. It would seem to me that most people would
instruct their secretaries not to read mail marked "CONFIDENTIAL -
ADDRESSEE ONLY", even if they delegate the reading of all other mail.
Now, if you have a secretary you can't trust - that's a whole separate
issue...
|
2526.2 | | TOPDOC::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Mon Jun 07 1993 09:54 | 6 |
| >On many occasions, I find that though a Manager is on leave/tour, his
>account is 'logged-in'. Should be his/her secretary!?
Maybe they've just gone off on vacation and left their workstation
paused. Ever think of that?
|
2526.3 | | CSOA1::ROBINSON | | Mon Jun 07 1993 14:48 | 16 |
| I am a secretary in Pittsburgh and I can only relate the arrangement my
manager and I have. If he is out of town, on vacation, etc. he
specifically asks me to print out any messages that look more important
(confidential, etc.) than others so that he can address those first
upon his return to the office. Since he usually gets 20+ messages a
day if I let them all stay in his inbox there would be messages buried
in there that he may not see for a week after he returns. However, if
I've printed them and put them on his desk in a confidential envelope
then he can usually deal with them during the first day that he's back.
Luckily he trusts me to not share with the world the information that
he receives on a day-to-day basis. If he didn't I'm sure we wouldn't
work things the way we do.
Hope this helps,
Lori
|
2526.4 | | NETRIX::thomas | The Code Warrior | Mon Jun 07 1993 14:59 | 1 |
| 20 messages a day? Oh, to have so few....
|
2526.5 | Log in from anywhere!! | ICS::VERMA | | Tue Jun 08 1993 12:17 | 3 |
| The basic assumption that one has to be physically in the office to
be 'logged-in' is incorrect.
|
2526.6 | | TROPPO::QUODLING | | Tue Jun 08 1993 21:42 | 9 |
| re .4
<<< Note 2526.4 by NETRIX::thomas "The Code Warrior" >>>
20 messages a day? Oh, to have so few....
And to have a secretary look after them, what's more...
q
|
2526.7 | The word Secretary comes from "Secret" ... | AUSTIN::UNLAND | Digitus Impudicus | Wed Jun 09 1993 20:34 | 1 |
|
|
2526.8 | | TALLIS::KIRK | Matt Kirk | Thu Jun 10 1993 00:37 | 15 |
| I'm logged in right now, and I'm 900 miles from my office.
I agree though - I think there's a potential invasion of privacy
issue when asking one's secretary to screen email. If someone sends
you private regular mail, they can put it in a sealed envelope
and write "personal" on the outside. The receiver can then figure
out if it's been read, and it keeps someone scanning the mail from
glimpsing part of the contents while sorting mail.
The same is not necessarily true of email. When I read my email,
I regularly type the wrong number and wind up reading a message
I hadn't intended to read yet. I'm sure that, aside from better
typing skills, secretaries run into the same problem.
Matt
|
2526.9 | ..skirting the issue? | HGOVC::JAYANTKUMAR | Jayant Kumar, DECAsia, Hong Kong | Thu Jun 10 1993 00:43 | 42 |
| Almost all the people who have replied have skirted the main issue.
RE .2 : Depending on how SECUR PACK is installed, system should
normally log you off after some time, right? In such a case, the
account couldn't have been paused!
RE .3: '...luckily he trusts me..' - can everybody say this of all
secretaries?
RE .5: I do understand that the Manager could have remotely logged in;
that's no problem, I understand it.
Human by nature is inquisitive...how do you prevent the secretary from
NOT reading other folders ( other than NEWMAIL )?
There's been plenty of discussion in DIGITAL notes-conference about
'sanctity' of sending personal / confidential mails and also about
whether it is an acceptable norm. What I don't understand is on what
basis a Manager decides to let his secretary use his/her account. Can
somebody explain the 'thinking process' / logic?
Another thing is that any information one reads tends to get discussed
/ passed-on to others..imagine your appraisal notes / comments being
known to the whole world OR your observations of a particular situation
becoming public knowledge.
Anyways.....the concept is very disturbing.
How about
(a) some sort of ( AI-based? ) intelligent filter to retain specific
mails, depending on subject/sender?
(b) having 2 accounts : one for general mails and the other for
CONFIDENTIAL ONLY?
(c) insisting that everytime one is away from office/town for a long
^^^^^^^^^
time, have WATCHMAIL / Auto-reply take over?
Kumar
|
2526.10 | One secretary's point of view... | NASZKO::DISMUKE | WANTED: New Personal Name | Thu Jun 10 1993 13:54 | 16 |
| RE: confidentiality and the secretary...One secretary's P.O.V.
I am trusted with a great deal of proprietary information within my
organization and I am happy to report I earned that trust by being
trustworthy! I have access to EDCFs, performance reviews, TSFO lists,
etc. I have been asked to divulge this information, in fact I have
been begged almost. My job and my loyalty to my manager and myself is
much more important to me than any other employee or their need to
know. There are a great many times I have been tempted to write a
reply here regarding some topics, but realize that it would jeopardize
my position. I really like the fact that my manager trusts me with
confidential information - not only work related, but also personal at
times. I value that trust and will do nothing to jeopardize it - not
for anyone. All this for less than $30K/year!! Can you imagine!!
-sandy
|
2526.11 | | TALLIS::KIRK | Matt Kirk | Thu Jun 10 1993 17:48 | 12 |
| re .9 and being logged off after a certain amount of time -
thankfully, I've never worked for a group that had something
that logged me out at night. Those things are a real pain in the
butt.
re .10 - your manager trusts you, but do the people who send him
confidential mail trust you? If it's not ok with them if you read
their messages, then youur manager is committing a breach of
confidentiality, IMHO.
Matt
|
2526.12 | Under-appreciated professionalism | MEMIT::M_CHARDON | | Thu Jun 10 1993 18:35 | 17 |
| Two comments:
1. In my experience, a large proportion of managers (and almost all
senior managers) work with their secretaries in the way described in
reply 10 above. To act as if this were otherwise, is to deny the
reality of this communications medium. If you have something that is
"for his/her eyes only", I think that you'd best give it to the person
personally.
2. I entirely subscribe to the comments in .10; secretaries at Digital
handle much of this company's cost center reporting, the salary system
ticklers, and a whole host of confidential information in partnership
with the managers they support. In the main, they do it in a
professional, confidential and sensitive manner. It is simply part of
the job, IMHO. It seems to me that there are a lot of people who don't
view this *profession* as being the valuable one that it is.
|
2526.13 | | RUSURE::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Fri Jun 11 1993 10:22 | 26 |
| Re .10, .12:
.10> I am trusted . . .
.12> . . . they do it in a professional, confidential and sensitive
.12> manner . . .
.12> It seems to me that there are a lot of people who don't view this
.12> *profession* as being the valuable one that it is.
What does the value of the "profession" have to do with security?
Nothing. There's plenty of people in the company more valuable than
secretaries, but we still have them use their own accounts, not other
people's.
Why? There are tens of thousands of people in this company. _Some_ of
them are going to misuse, steal, or destroy information. If a system
is properly set up, many improper acts can be traced to a specific
person. But if multiple people are sharing an account, the system
can't provide any way to tell them apart.
Allowing more than one person to use one account is a violation of
corporate security policy, and with good reason.
-- edp
|
2526.14 | What world do you live in? | SMAUG::GARROD | From VMS -> NT, Unix a future page from history | Fri Jun 11 1993 10:43 | 23 |
| Re .13
This may not be obvious to you "edp". But a manager has a secretary
monitor his/her mail account so they can spend their time doing
something more productive. A job of a good secretary is to make sure
that a manager gets to see what is important and doesn't get to see
what is unimportant. A poor secretary doesn't do this very well and
gets the reputation for being a poor screen or just a nuisance. But
good secretaries (and from what I've seen most secretaries in Digital
fall into the latter category) really help a manager be more efficient
at their job.
Which would you prefer:
a) Send mail to a manager and have it ignored because it wasn't read
or aged.
b) Have it screened by a secretary and have it acted upon. The best
secretaries even know the organization well enough to forward on
mail to somebody more appropriate to answer it.
c) Hire more 6 figure salary managers so that they can keep up with
their mail.
Dave
|
2526.15 | | CSOA1::ROBINSON | | Fri Jun 11 1993 11:25 | 8 |
| RE: .14
Dave,
As a secretary, I thank you for the reply you wrote. It's more or
less what I tried to express is reply .3.
Lori
|
2526.16 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Fri Jun 11 1993 11:41 | 14 |
|
> Allowing more than one person to use one account is a violation of
> corporate security policy, and with good reason.
If you use ALL-IN-1, it is a feature included by request from many
customers.
A secretary can get access to the managers inbox, read, and outbox, as
if they were folders in their own account.......if the manager
gives them access.
Heather
|
2526.17 | | RUSURE::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Fri Jun 11 1993 12:14 | 32 |
| Re .14:
> This may not be obvious to you "edp".
It is perfectly obvious to me, but if you are questioning
comprehension, it is time to examine your own understanding of computer
systems. Did I write one word that would imply a secretary should not
process a manager's mail? No, I did not. I said they should have a
separate account. Is your knowledge of the computer systems we
manufacture so slight that you do not know that multiple users can
share information?
> But a manager has a secretary monitor his/her mail account so they
> can spend their time doing something more productive.
What on Earth does this have to do with using separate accounts? Not a
thing. In an earlier note, I described two ways a secretary can handle
a manager's mail from a separate account. One way is to have the
manager's mail forwarded to the secretary's account. The secretary can
then filter, process, and file the manager's mail. Mail the manager
needs to see can be sent back with forwarding disabled. The second way
is to set up ACLs so the secretary has access to the manager's mail. A
competent system manager should be able to set up both of these
situations and explain the advantages and disadvantages of each.
Note that neither of the two above arrangements would allow the
secretary to send out mail from the manager's account, or vice-versa.
Thus, neither person could impersonate the other -- that's part of the
advantage of having separate accounts.
-- edp
|
2526.18 | | RUSURE::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Fri Jun 11 1993 12:15 | 7 |
| Re .16:
Using the files of one account from another is NOT the same as using
another account.
-- edp
|
2526.19 | | BJ6000::DAVE | Outlanders, Do it Again | Fri Jun 11 1993 12:19 | 8 |
| EDP,
How often have you needed mail from the cost center manager or further up the
chain to get something approved? Mail from the secretary's account doesn't cut
it. So secretaries often have to use the manager's account in order to
generate the mass of approvals that this company thrives on.
Dave
|
2526.20 | | RUSURE::EDP | Always mount a scratch monkey. | Fri Jun 11 1993 12:24 | 8 |
| Re .19:
Representing mail from a secretary as mail from a manager is fraud and
is one of the things that proper system security is supposed to
prevent.
-- edp
|
2526.21 | This question is older than computers | PASTA::SEILER | Larry Seiler | Fri Jun 11 1993 13:24 | 47 |
| The discussion in .17 etc about how a secretary can have access to a
manager's mail without having login access to the manager's account
is useful and interesting. While I agree with the points about
security, it needs to be pointed out that secretaries have been
signing their boss' names to routine documents for centuries.
Good secretaries (or perhaps I really mean a good administrative
assistants) know how their boss wants things done, including what
constitutes a routine task that the boss wants taken care of without
bugging him/her.
The better and more official way to do this is to have the manager
sign things him/herself on the secretary's recommendation. However,
if the secretary says it is routine, is the manager really going to
read the stuff before signing? There isn't a lot of difference in
practice between this and the secretary signing the manager's name
by direction. If one asks whose fault it is if the secretary abuses
this trust, my answer is that it is the manager's fault (as well as the
secretary's fault). Managers are supposed to know whom to trust, and
managers are responsible for what their people do.
However, this is a side issue from the main discussion, which relates
to whether a manager has a right to choose to let a secretary see
his/her mail. There are two answers that should be obvious. First,
computer messages are NOT secure, and email should NEVER be used for
really confidential information. There are plenty of opportunities for
anyone with system privileges to secretly peek at the files. For that
matter, it's a risk to store confidential information in a computer at
all, if anyone who isn't trusted has access to the system. Or to store
it in a filing cabinet if you don't trust everyone who has keys to it.
The second obvious answer is that this is no different from a manager
telling a secretary to open ALL paper mail, including mail marked
"personal and confidential". I believe that some managers do this
(though usually with a short list of people whose mail shouldn't be
opened). Want to bet that Bob Palmer doesn't do this? There's plenty of
junk mail that comes marked "personal" precisely to try to get it past
those whose job it is to filter the mail. As someone said, if it's so
confidential that it cannot be trusted to a secretary, then it should be
given directly to the manager.
Enjoy,
Larry
PS -- My family owns a document signed "Abraham Lincoln". It's a land
grant for some acerage in South Dakota. Apparently the law or custom
of the time required the president's signature on the land grants. As
I said, secretaries have been signing their boss' names for centuries. LS
|
2526.22 | LAZY | FUNYET::ANDERSON | OpenVMS Forever! | Fri Jun 11 1993 13:41 | 12 |
| The proper solution is to set up the system to grant a secretary access to a
manager's mail. The proper solution is to allow the secretary "approval
authorization" for the manager.
The improper solution is the LAZY one taken so often at Digital: let the
secretary log in to the manager's account. As edp points out, this behavior
violates corporate security standards and should not be tolerated.
If I had a need for you to look at my bank account and where I spent my money, I
certainly wouldn't hand you my bank card and give you my password.
Paul
|
2526.23 | | AXEL::FOLEY | Rebel without a Clue | Fri Jun 11 1993 13:41 | 8 |
|
Maybe you shouldn't argue the implementation details and
just stick with the principles here.. There's a million
and one ways to skin a cat. Whether is should be done is
the arguement.
mike
|
2526.24 | Maximus maxim.... | MARX::BAIRD | NOW I get Aunt Zoe's kids! | Fri Jun 11 1993 13:47 | 8 |
|
IMHO: There is no one, in any company, more important than a secretary.
Anyone not in control of the flavor and implications of that
observation, cannot be successful.
J.B.
|
2526.25 | Except those that don't need them, of course | CSOA1::PROIE | | Fri Jun 11 1993 14:50 | 6 |
| > IMHO: There is no one, in any company, more important than a secretary.
I've seen successful companies that have no secretaries, but I have yet
to see a company that consists of only secretaries.
Wayne
|
2526.26 | corporate "culture" and "rights" | PLOUGH::OLSEN | | Fri Jun 11 1993 15:16 | 27 |
| I wonder if we should consider "what" a "manager" is.
A manager has been given authority, and responsibility, for many
discretionary actions.
None of this authority is given to non-managers.
The manager delegates to the non-manager (secretary) according to
discretionary decision.
What this brings up is, in our "culture", ignorance of the implied
"this does not apply to managers" in our policies and procedures
manuals. Work is not a democracy in practice. We cannot "own"
property at work, nor be protected from "pursuit of happiness". It
will take many court cases to turn this around, to where the rules
apply even to managers. If ever that will happen.
The other cultural exception which applies is "private secretary".
That role is discharged with honor by very many upright individuals.
If it's not broke, don't fix it. Still, I think I want to be able
to send an electronic equivalent to the company's "Personnel" level,
explicitly addressee-only, with a wrapping that at least deters (not
defeats) accidental-key or curiosity breaches.
Rich
|
2526.27 | Chatty secretary? | HGOVC::JAYANTKUMAR | Jayant Kumar,DECAsia,Hong Kong | Mon Jun 14 1993 04:22 | 12 |
| What if I know that the person who is reading the Managers's mail is
a person whom others consider 'chatty'?
I know a lot of you would say '...how come he remains to be a
secretary?...' One of the mysteries of life, I would say.
So, the question is: SHOULD ONE NEVER SEND CONFIDENTIAL / PERSONAL /
PRIVATE MAIL TO ANYONE without ascertaining that the recipient NEVER
allows anybody else to read his/her mail?
Kumar
|
2526.28 | | CARTUN::STRATTON | Can you see the real me? | Mon Jun 14 1993 09:13 | 11 |
| re: -1
>> So, the question is: SHOULD ONE NEVER SEND CONFIDENTIAL / PERSONAL /
>> PRIVATE MAIL TO ANYONE without ascertaining that the recipient NEVER
>> allows anybody else to read his/her mail?
If you are that concerned about it, send your letter (registered mail
with return receipt) to your manager's home. Oops, may run into the
same problem at the manager's home (spouse, S.O., children).
Roberta Davidson-Stratton
|
2526.29 | Report them to their manager | SMAUG::GARROD | From VMS -> NT, Unix a future page from history | Mon Jun 14 1993 12:09 | 9 |
| Re .27
The answer is simple. If you have specific instances of a secretary
betraying confidences they have been entrusted with you whould report
it to their manager. Professional secretaries don't disclose
confidential information. And unprofessional ones that do should be
fired, no questions asked.
Dave
|
2526.30 | A long-standing practice | TNPUBS::JONG | Steve | Mon Jun 14 1993 17:05 | 12 |
| In the real world, or at least in Washington, Congressmen employ
legions of secretaries who process mail and sometimes answer it in the
name of the Congressman. This has gone on for centuries; there used to
be a word for that job, which I believe was "amenuensis" (but I can't
spell it and it's not in either of my dictionaries). My family has a
set of correspondence from forty years ago between my father and
then-Representative John F. Kennedy; of twelve letters he got from JFK,
two have been judged as signed by Kennedy, and the other ten by two
different secretaries essentially forging Kennedy's signature.
This is not a computer problem per se; it is a practice of long
standing.
|
2526.31 | At least it was Human!!! | SPECXN::BLEY | | Mon Jun 14 1993 17:17 | 16 |
|
You don't even get that from the president! There are thousands of
letters to the president every day. There is no way he could answer
them. So, what did the White House do, you may ask.
They have developed a software package (used to run on a VAX), that
scans the letter looking for "key" words and/or phrases. From these
key words/phrases, a response is generated (by the computer), and the
response is printed on (used to be), an LPS40. And YES, the LPS40
also SIGNS the letter using the presidents hand written signature.
The signature is digitized and put into a postscript file.
Soooo....be glad that a "human" signed your letter, even if it was
forged.
|
2526.32 | | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Mon Jun 14 1993 18:00 | 5 |
| "The signature is digitized and put into a postscript file."
Actually, it's a tiled bitmap file.
Ann B.
|
2526.33 | | ELWOOD::LANE | Zzzzzzz | Tue Jun 15 1993 07:57 | 5 |
| re .30
"In the real world, or at least in Washington, Congressmen ....."
There's something wrong with this phrase....
|
2526.34 | just my 2 cents | WMOIS::REILLY_R | | Tue Jun 15 1993 10:37 | 10 |
| Just Jumping in with my 2 cents.....If the secretary...is doing "all"
this for the manager, then I think the mang should give up his salery
or pay a % to each secretary for the amount of work they are doing for
him!!! Personally I feel that it is the Managers responsibility to
check his/her own mail and respond to them...That's there job...instead
of attending 20 meeting's a week...stay and work issues????????
(boy is this opening a can of worms.8^).. I also happen to know that
using someones account is against Security......(I'm ex-security)
Bob
|
2526.35 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Wed Jun 16 1993 06:33 | 16 |
| > I also happen to know that
> using someones account is against Security......(I'm ex-security)
However, you can read someones inbox, outbox and read folder, and send
a mail, without logging into their account, they just have to set up the
parameters, via menu functions.
It is a feature of ALL-IN-1, specifically designed for managers
and secretaries to work better together with the aid of technology.
Personally, I would like to see all secretaries doing this, and
filtering/prioritising the managers mail, and doing other work that they
can do for them, and allow the managers to get on and manage.......or
we'll never get out of the mess we're in.
Heather
|
2526.36 | | GVA05::STIFF | Paul Stiff DCS, DTN:821-4167 | Wed Jun 16 1993 07:16 | 10 |
| <moderate simmer on>
...and just to add to Heather's comments, maybe security could look at
business needs as well as technological standards - the one person/one
account rule is a pile of rubbish, which IS are the first to violate
with the SYSTEM and system administration accounts.
<moderate simmer off>
Paul
|
2526.37 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Wed Jun 16 1993 08:46 | 4 |
| Err, what 1-person 1-account rule?
3-account Heather
|
2526.38 | | GVA05::STIFF | Paul Stiff DCS, DTN:821-4167 | Wed Jun 16 1993 10:52 | 4 |
| Corporate Security say that each account should only have one owner and
one person accessing it (multi-access forbidden)
Paul
|
2526.39 | Pinnacle of Contradiction | BTOVT::SOJDA | | Wed Jun 16 1993 12:04 | 25 |
| I guess the thing that amazes me so much about this whole discussion is that we
have a plainly stated corporate policy openly ignored, not by technical
individuals, but by the same people whose jobs it is to ensure this is enforced
in the first place!
Consider the following that I have run across over the years:
1) A DM who *never* read his own mail but had his secretery print it off so he
could take it home and read it at night.
2) A unit manager who, quite innocently, didn't even understand that there was
a policy against having his secretary read *and reply* from his account
because he had been doing it routinely for years, as had been his peers.
3) A new services manager who felt it was *privilege* that came with the job to
have a secretary who could get into his account so he didn't have to read
and answer mail.
These are not just the exeptions to the rule, it is standard practice.
I am not arguing for or against having a secretary read a manager's mail. There
are many good arguements for it as well as against it (all discussed here).
However, either the practice should be stopped or the security policy revised so
we have some consistency.
|
2526.40 | Brave New World | SALEM::GILMAN | | Wed Jun 16 1993 12:54 | 24 |
| re. letters to President scanned electronically for keywords and reply
generated automatically from generic canned responses according to
keywords.
If this is true then it makes little sense to write the President. I
don't write to get an automated response to help encourage me to keep
my mouth shut because the automated response is telling me what I want
to hear.
I want a HUMAN with at least input to the President to read the letter
and generate a reply which at least considered what I said. I suppose
that writing Senators and Representatives involves similiar 'programs'?
This new E Mail thing 'straight to the President' which was announced a
couple of weeks ago REEKS of the ability to 'scan' ones E Mail and
computer generate 'responses'. Now its even EASIER to scan incoming
mail... they don't even HAVE to scan the letters... they will already
HAVE the softcopy you E Mailed them! Talk about depersonalization....
this has reached the height of depersonalization. I know, they CAN'T
read all the damm letters.... too many of them and all. If thats the
case then they should just SAY SO and don't bother with a reply...
Jeff
|
2526.41 | | ECADSR::SHERMAN | Steve ECADSR::Sherman DTN 223-3326 MLO5-2/26a | Wed Jun 16 1993 13:06 | 18 |
| As to sending a letter to the President and automatically scanned words ...
this could get funny. Imagine how a letter sent to the President like
this might be received:
Dear Mr. President,
Sorry to hear that the Press shot down your latest ideas. From what I
understand, it was a bit of a bombshell for you to terminate the last
press conference so abruptly due to that loaded question. Seems like
the press is always looking for some sort of smoking gun, I suppose.
May I offer a simple suggestion? Next time the press is spying on you,
just nuke 'em with your sexy smile like you did at the last successful
press conference. They probably feel tortured when you just kill them
all off with a sentence that just cuts things short.
Sincerly,
A. Faithful Supporter
|
2526.42 | Automated Reply | SALEM::GILMAN | | Thu Jun 17 1993 13:23 | 17 |
|
(automated reply) but no headers say so.
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
Dear A. Faithful Supporter,
Thank you so much for your thoughtfull letter. Yes, we do have press
conferences and we appreciate your interest in them. The President has
such a busy schedule he has to cut some of them short.
Write again the next time you have questions about press conferences.
Sincerely,
President XXXXXX
|
2526.43 | Concluding the discussion | HGOVC::JAYANTKUMAR | Jayant Kumar,DECAsia,Hong Kong | Fri Jun 18 1993 00:56 | 26 |
| Well folks...it has been great hearing different viewpoints from all
sections of people. I know it is very difficult to arrive at some sort
of 'conclusion' but let me try to summarise / conclude:
1. Most people recognise / agree that electronic mail systems are NOT
to be used for confidential mail.
2. Most probably, confidential matters should be hard-copied and passed
on to the recipient ( in a sealed cover! ) with appropriate
markings.
3. In general, most secretaries in Digital are trusted.
4. Whoever is incharge of implementing Corporate Security ( as
applicable to computer systems ) should review the current practices
and repair the dents.
5. We do not have sufficient 'techniques' to prevent 'misuse' (
pls..don't flame me for using this term ) of ALL-IN-1 or VAXmail.
So.....take care and be more careful in future. That's a good lesson
learnt from these discussions.
Thanks to all the participants.
Kumar
|