From: sethf@MIT.EDU
To: holovacs@styx.ios.com
Message Hash: 4a8192e9b5a3ba8f635d4e340df985fce2244d42284f50128e871b28e9544a69
Message ID: <9512180009.AA18900@frumious-bandersnatch.MIT.EDU>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1995-12-18 02:23:30 UTC
Raw Date: Mon, 18 Dec 1995 10:23:30 +0800
From: sethf@MIT.EDU
Date: Mon, 18 Dec 1995 10:23:30 +0800
To: holovacs@styx.ios.com
Subject: Re: Oklahoma University: Is this legal?...
Message-ID: <9512180009.AA18900@frumious-bandersnatch.MIT.EDU>
MIME-Version: 1.0
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Going on my past experiences with this sort of situation, I
think the problem is
a) Oklahoma University is public (seems true from
http://www.uoknor.edu/)
b) The state of Oklahoma has an "open public records" law
so
c) someone decided that everything stored on the University's
computer system was therefore a "public record" (since the computer is
"owned" by the public), and thus had to be accessible by law.
This seems to be approximately what's going on:
"Drafted by Associate Chief Counsel Kurt Ockershauser a year
ago, the policy will make a legal statement that e-mail is running on
state property, Colaw said. He said the policy is not an invasion of privacy."
http://www.uoknor.edu/okdaily/issues/fall1995/dec-7/1-email.processed.html
Someone needs to explain to him that what he is doing is not
legally required, and perhaps violates the ECPA.
================
Seth Finkelstein
sethf@mit.edu
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1995-12-18 (Mon, 18 Dec 1995 10:23:30 +0800) - Re: Oklahoma University: Is this legal?… - sethf@MIT.EDU