>The exception would be if an important E-mail was sent with a virus, and
>needed to be retrieved without the sender re-sending it.
>
>How is that "important email" identified?
However you want to define it. In most cases, it involves the CEO of a
company getting an E-mail from the CEO of another company, who has a
virus. The E-mail gets caught because it has a virus. The CEO of your
company is told that he should ask the CEO of the other company to get rid
of the virus and re-send the E-mail. Your CEO is afraid of asking the
other CEO to do that, so he asks you to retrieve the original E-mail.
Personally, I feel that no E-mail that is sent with a virus is important
enough to retrieve, and that it should be re-sent after the sender removes
the virus. But, if the boss feels otherwise...
-Scott
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