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Every day, tens of millions of people use electronic mail to conduct business and
to communicate with friends and family. But if you think your e-mail is
private, guess again.
E-mail is no more private than a postcard. Unlike
other forms of communication, such as telephone calls, which are protected
in the United States under laws like the Electronic Communications Privacy
Act of 1986 and by similar laws in other countries, e-mail has little similar protection. The situation becomes
even murkier for messages sent or received at your place of business.
For Your Eyes Only?
An electronic message typically makes numerous stops at computers along the route
to its final destination. At each stop, it can be intercepted and read by
snoops. Why would someone want to do this? For hackers, there's the
challenge of eavesdropping in cyberspace; for business competitors, confidential
data may have strategic value. After all, information is power.
Where Has All the E-mail Gone?
Even after you've received a message and deleted it, the message doesn't vanish. Many Internet service providers archive e-mail for some period of time. These archives can be accessed and even subpoenaed in the event of an investigation or lawsuit. The same holds true for messages received at work. Although you hit the Delete key, the message may still exist in the company system. Those off-color remarks you wrote may come back to haunt you!

Learn the Net (www.learnthenet.com) is
Copyright 1996-2009. Michael Lerner Productions.
All Rights Reserved.
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