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How many of us think that the emails we write are private?
Tim North has written the following article giving all of us a heads up to be careful about what we write because who
knows who will be reading it.
There is mention of Tim's site and many other articles that he has written. It would be worth your while to check
them out.
Is your e-mail private? No! by Tim North, http://www.BetterWritingSkills.com
Consider the following
three claims:
1. Your e-mail is not private.
2. Your e-mail might not be sent to the intended recipient.
3.
Your e-mail can continue to exist even after you delete it.
The following article explains the truth of these alarming statements
and why you should be concerned if you're sending confidential messages by e-mail.
1. The privacy problem ---------------------- When
you send an e-mail message from computer A to computer B it passes through one or more machines (C, D, E, etc.) on its journey.
At each step along the way, an unscrupulous individual with access to the intermediate machine has the opportunity to read
-- or even alter -- your e-mail message.
Within a private intranet (i.e. a company network), such privacy violations
could occur if:
* IT staff with access to the mail server were unscrupulous;
* unauthorised personnel
had access to the mail server (e.g. if someone walked away from the server without logging out); or
* security measures designed to keep hackers out of the mail server were insufficient or were not enforced
rigorously.
When e-mail is sent over the Internet (a public network) the risks become notably higher. If you send
an e-mail message from Sydney to New York it may pass through half-a-dozen machines on its journey, *each* of which
are subject to the risks mentioned above. Thus the hazards accumulate with each extra machine that the message passes
through.
2. The identity problem ----------------------- Another risk with e-mail is that you really don't
know who will receive it. This happens because some people choose to forward (i.e. divert) their e-mail to another person
or authorise another person to read it for them. For example, if you send a message to a senior colleague, remember
that this person's e-mail might be read by his or her secretary or stand-in. That can be awkward.
I know of a case
where a manager sent an e-mail report to his CEO describing a clerical officer's poor performance. The CEO had, unfortunately,
forwarded his e-mail to his acting secretary, who that day happened to be (you guessed it) the clerical officer in question.
The clerical officer read the critical report, and all manner of morale problems ensued.
3. The deletion problem ----------------------- A
further privacy issue surrounding e-mail involves what happens when you delete an e-mail message. You might expect that
deleting an e-mail message removes it irretrievably. This is often not the case. though.
In fact, it's a tough
job to delete every copy of a piece of e-mail. There are many ways that a "deleted" e-mail message might still be accessible:
1. Daily or weekly backups of the mail server may still contain messages that were subsequently
deleted.
2. When you delete an e-mail message, many e-mail programs simply move
it to a trash folder, rather than actually deleting it. It's not until you select their "Empty
the Trash" command (or similar) that the message is actually deleted.
3. Even after you empty your trash folder, many network-based e-mail programs still archive deleted
messages for a period of time before deleting them. During this archival period
(30-90 days is typical) the message could be available to unscrupulous or unauthorised individuals.
4. Even after a file is deleted from a computer's hard disk, the information is often still available
until that portion of the disk's surface is overwritten with new information.
During this period the deleted files could be available to unscrupulous individuals with physical
access to the computer.
5. Even if you take steps to avoid all the potential problems
above, remember that the e-mail message is probably still available on the PC of the person you
sent it to (or who sent it to you).
4. Conclusions -------------- The moral of
this story is clear: e-mail is not a private medium. Don't send messages by e-mail unless you're comfortable assuming that
they may be read by people other than the intended recipients.
So next time you go to press that "Send" button,
ask yourself "Am I okay with this being seen publicly?" If not, pick up the phone!
----------------------------------------------------------------- You'll
find many more helpful tips like these in Tim North's much applauded range of e-books. More information is available on
his web site, and all books come with a money-back guarantee.
http://www.BetterWritingSkills.com -----------------------------------------------------------------

A new direction...
Writing, publishing, books, articles, anything and everything...
No matter your age... You can Write!
I've decided to use this page to encourage the art of writing.
I will be touching bases on all facets connected to this art, and suggesting sites that have much
to offer.
How Do You Write?
Do you sit down at your computer and just tap away? Do the words flow, do your ideas come easily?
I have my own way of writing... I like to get out a legal pad and a PaperMate Soft Tip Pen, find a comfortable
spot and... well, just begin.
I keep a folder with all the ideas and thoughts that come to my mind each day and when I'm
ready to write I choose something that sounds interesting and scribble away.
Words may flow, words may not come easily, but I write. Sometimes it seems that an article practically
writes itself, even organizes itself! Other times it seems I jot ideas in the margins but cannot get them to gel in the main
body. During these times I write and rewrite until what I have written makes sense. If I read it and the words are what I'm
trying to say do make sense I'm happy.
Once I've reached this point, I'm ready to fire up the computer and input what I've written. I correct
my copy, open a file folder and store what I've written. I try to do this on a regular basis so I'll always have a folder
full of articles ready to use when I need one.
When I'm writing a book this initial procedure is the same, but I open up a new folder and as I finish
a chapter I store it in the folder. I name the folder with the same title I'll use for my book.
Before I even begin writing the book, I set-up the format,
arrange the chapters, number the chapters, assign a section to the table of contents, do all the preliminaries,
and number the pages. I follow the book format as used by a publisher from the copyright page, the dedication, the page listing
all the books I've written, the bio, everything needed to make for a complete book.
After all this and the book is completed, I go back and edit, and edit again, until I'm sure everything
is as right as it can be, and even then something gets missed and I don't find it until the book is published... then it is
too late.
What I do, you can do, just try it.
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