Thomas> I sent an e-mail earlier about some e-mails from my company to Thomas> your company regarding tech support. These e-mails found on Thomas> google.com contained confidential information and had Thomas> disclaimers as such in the e-mails. I have since found several Thomas> of these e-mails easily searchable on google.com and free for Thomas> the world to see. This puts my company at financial jeopardy as Thomas> we are held liable for content that was supposed to be kept in Thomas> private and via your servers with the rest of the world.
Thomas, I'm not sure where you got the idea that posting messages to a public mailing list about an open source tool such as SpamBayes constituted private communication with the tech support group of another company. I presume you subscribed to the list or at least visited the subscription page. Right there is a link to the mailing list archives. Anyone can read them. The fact that you found your messages via Google is not surprising and demonstrates how the system is supposed to work. If Google found them then Yahoo!, MSN and other search engines almost certainly found them as well. In addition, email mirroring services will have them: Gmane, Google Groups, etc. Finally, I suspect you can find your messages via Alexa's Wayback Machine. The responsibility for using the technology appropriately rests with you. The horse left the barn months ago. Now you want someone else to close the door. That's not going to help. -- Skip Montanaro - [EMAIL PROTECTED] - http://www.webfast.com/~skip/ _______________________________________________ SpamBayes@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/spambayes Check the FAQ before asking: http://spambayes.sf.net/faq.html