1997-10-31 - RE: PGP Employee on MKR

Header Data

From: Fisher Mark <FisherM@exch1.indy.tce.com>
To: “‘cypherpunks’” <cypherpunks@cyberpass.net>
Message Hash: e2b783b5283bac5f007173a736ca4d31a9f245f62e7abf9c16217fe5c241e6d4
Message ID: <2328C77FF9F2D011AE970000F84104A74933FD@indyexch_fddi.indy.tce.com>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1997-10-31 17:54:57 UTC
Raw Date: Sat, 1 Nov 1997 01:54:57 +0800

Raw message

From: Fisher Mark <FisherM@exch1.indy.tce.com>
Date: Sat, 1 Nov 1997 01:54:57 +0800
To: "'cypherpunks'" <cypherpunks@cyberpass.net>
Subject: RE: PGP Employee on MKR
Message-ID: <2328C77FF9F2D011AE970000F84104A74933FD@indyexch_fddi.indy.tce.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain



>Scenario #2: employee quits jon in a huff, refuses to divulge
>passphrase, lots of queued encrypted email -- what now?

Or lots of encrypted old email that contains useful information.
Especially in a larger corporate environment, where an email system is
deployed that uses a proprietary message store (like Microsoft Mail or
Microsoft Exchange), people tend to use the mailboxes as storage
containers.  It gets worse if these isn't a way to get the messages out
of the vendor's message store conveniently -- if you want to keep old
messages around, they _have_ to be stored in the vendor's message store.
==========================================================
Mark Leighton Fisher          Thomson Consumer Electronics
fisherm@indy.tce.com          Indianapolis, IN
"Their walls are built of cannon balls, their motto is
'Don't Tread on Me'"






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