
Question for the group: I have encountered a situation that causes me to believe an ISP is snoopingthrough encrytped mail. It seems that PGP'd mail has aroused the curiosity of an ISP (not hooked.net).. I have encountered "POP3 account in use by another user" several times in the past few days and I am the only user... wondering if that "in use" messsage is the result of a clumsy sysadmin being caught with his hand in the cookie jar. Any thoughts from the group??? If those more knowledgeable than I deem these NOISE... my sincere apologies.
An admin could just copy the mail spool file to a safer place, then read through at their leisure.
Unless its someone totally clueless (which some ISP's are), I doubt that they are pulling off the pop3d. It could be that your mail spool file is locked by a mail transport agent, and that is why that error message is occuring.
Any thoughts?
As someone who has operated an ISP himself, I would say that the likelihood of this being a system problem is very high. Especially if this is a relatively new ISP, or if they've upgraded anything at all on their mail server, it's pretty easy to break the delicate balance of daemons and permissions such that this problem could easily occur. It's worth a call to their technical support line (I know.. I'm sure it's always busy) just to inform them of the problem. Sometimes it'll time out (if it's one kind of problem) and sometimes it'll hang there until a lock file is specifically removed (a different kind of problem). All other comments regarding the likelihood that a sysadmin would try to read mail in the real environment apply. Jason