Of all the ineffectual e-mail disclaimers I see, one I received earlier this week takes the prize for self-defeating impotence. A public relations flak wrote me trying to get publicity for a security conference. His was the standard spiel: the whos who would be there, the whats that would be learned, the wheres and whens and whys.. . .. Of all the ineffectual e-mail disclaimers I see, one I received earlier this week takes the prize for self-defeating impotence. A public relations flak wrote me trying to get publicity for a security conference. His was the standard spiel: the whos who would be there, the whats that would be learned, the wheres and whens and whys. But at the bottom of the message, I found this disclaimer: CONFIDENTIALITY: The information contained in this E-mail message is intended only for the personal and confidential use of the designated recipient(s) named above. This message is intended to be a confidential communication and may involve information or material, which is protected under state or federal privacy laws. The disclaimer droned on a while longer in deep legalese and horrid grammar--nothing that that e-mail users haven't learned to ignore long ago. But here's the ludicrous part: The information was, in fact, intended to be spread far and wide, yet the disclaimer supposedly forbade me from doing that. The link for this article located at CIO is no longer available. . A compelling dialogue unfolded on the futility of lengthy email disclaimers that claim confidentiality, highlighting their ineffectiveness in true data safety. Ineffectual Security Notices, Email Disclaimers, Confidentiality Notices. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
By the third day of the Republican National Convention, the desultory crews manning the much hyped Internet Alley are as bored and shiftless as the rest of the thousands of reporters swarming over the convention site in an attempt to report . . . . By the third day of the Republican National Convention, the desultory crews manning the much hyped Internet Alley are as bored and shiftless as the rest of the thousands of reporters swarming over the convention site in an attempt to report news where there is none. Aside from a mobbed appearance by WWF star The Rock, nothing new is happening on the Alley. The link for this article located at TheStandard is no longer available. . Witness the languid rhythm of the Democratic National Assembly as outdated headlines collide with eager journalists.. Republican National Convention, Journalism Analysis, Media Behavior, News Coverage. . Anthony Pell
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