On Wed, 8 Oct 1997, Anonymous wrote:
Second, what if an employee doesn't come back from vacation? You've got messages sitting in his inbox which go back three weeks. All encrypted to his personal key, which is gone.
Shut up Kent, yes, we know it is you posting this rant. The above fails due to one single little key word "his personal key." If it is his personal key, then the business has no business reading his email. If it indeed is a corporate key you should have said so, and he - the employee could have arranged for his passphrased to be escrowed with the company's principals, if that wasn't done, the company is stupid and doesn't deserve to survive.
It's been long enough that the senders may not have backups any more. It's all lost, and at best the company is going to put its partners and customers to a great deal of inconvenience by making them re-send everything they've sent in the last three weeks, not to mention making the company look incompetent.
Correction: not only will they look incompetent, but in reality this will prove that they are! Single point of failure in any system is something every company should consider. It's the same with filing taxes so the IRS doesn't come down on your head, making backups of your servers incase the hard drive crashes and buying all sorts of insurance. This is a stupid arguement. Go away. =====================================Kaos=Keraunos=Kybernetos============== .+.^.+.| Ray Arachelian |Prying open my 3rd eye. So good to see |./|\. ..\|/..|sunder@sundernet.com|you once again. I thought you were |/\|/\ <--*-->| ------------------ |hiding, and you thought that I had run |\/|\/ ../|\..| "A toast to Odin, |away chasing the tail of dogma. I opened|.\|/. .+.v.+.|God of screwdrivers"|my eye and there we were.... |..... ======================= http://www.sundernet.com ==========================