- From: Nissen, Dan E <Dan.Nissen@UNISYS.com>
- Date: Thu, 22 May 2003 16:52:17 -0500
- To: w3c-wai-ig@w3.org
David, Generally, you are right. However, Unisys Global Mail Services sent me a notice that as of 18 May they have now implemented Out of Office so that it will not be returned on mail from outside Unisys. So, you should not see Unisys replies that way. Dan -----Original Message----- From: David Woolley [mailto:david@djwhome.demon.co.uk] Sent: Thursday, May 22, 2003 3:32 PM To: w3c-wai-ig@w3.org Subject: Re: OT - A Simple Plea > Would all those who use "Out of Office" messages *please* unsubscribe > from mailing lists before they do so? This sort of request doesn't work, as IT departments are in love with them, as they are in love with bulky "this is confidential" signatures. I repeatedly write to some of the main offenders, including their Postmasters, particularly Unisys and the UK cabinet office, but with no result. They argue that business contacts think they are being ignored if they don't get one, and Microsoft reputedly refuse to implement precedence list and precedence bulk header handling because there is no standards trace RFC for them, so they don't need to implement them to have a compliant product. Auto-response are often organisation level policies. Confidentiality notices almost always are. A lot of the people who generate them are policy makers, who passively monitor the list and therefore don't have the technical knowledge to customise the auto-response process and never suffer themselves, as they never post. The only tactic that half works is that used by the NTBUGTRAQ list, which got about 80 per posting, where they set the reply to address to be the list and summararily unsubscribed anyone who offended. I've tried pointing out that auto-responses can leak sensitive company and personal information to unknown people and that confidentiality notices on non-confidential material undermine the notice when it really is needed, as well as signalling a beaurocratic organisation.
Received on Thursday, 22 May 2003 17:52:23 UTC