>From my point of view:
If no one has asked you to monitor content and provided a written order, what are you 
doing browsing someone else' mail?
Its bad form, and can get you fired.
If you have been told to monitor then just enforce what is normally enforced.
Don't ask the end user. They will talk you into an exception, and that one exception 
will become a chink in your armour that will be used and abused by everyone.

I wasn't going to to register my opinion on this one, but I must tell you, taking 
advice from Hummert is a bad idea.
Whatever you do, don't do it because Hummert says so. I (shudder) have seen the places 
Hummert considers normal and it makes me want to scrub off the top 2 layers of my skin.
Sincerly,

Rachel

-----Original Message-----
From: James Liddil [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, December 18, 2002 10:14 AM
To: Exchange Discussions
Subject: Blocking a newsletter


Via Scanmail I find that a user is subscribed (or appears to be) to the
f^ckedcompany.com newsletter.  Besides the domain name there is other
profanity in the newsletter.  So do I follow company policy or let it slide?
My gut reaction is to ask the person if they are subscribed and then politely
ask them to unsubscribe and not have this kind of thing sent to a work
address.

Jim Liddil

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