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Network Security Focus-Microsoft
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RE: MS Exchange

Subject: RE: MS Exchange
Date: Fri, 28 Jul 2006 10:36:46 -0700
Can someone explain to me how a disclaimer at the bottom of an email can
do anything, legally?  Was there a case study where the disclaimer
worked in the court of law???  

Let's take a lawyer communication for example.  We all know that there
is privilege communication for lawyers and I fail to see how putting a
disclaimer or some stupid legal blurb at the end of an email would stop
the third party from disseminating information that he/she accidentally
intercepts?

Jeff

-----Original Message-----
From: Tupker, Mike [mailto:mtupker@mtmercy.edu] 
Sent: Friday, July 28, 2006 6:52 AM
To: dave kleiman; focus-ms@securityfocus.com
Subject: RE: MS Exchange

I've been looking into this a little as well. The cheapest way to do it
that I've found, if you are using exchange, is with an SMTP event sink.
Many spam filters that I've seen have the ability to append text to
emails as well. The only one that I can think of off hand is GFI Mail
Essentials. http://gfi.com/mes/

I'm not sure if these would allow you to pull info from AD though. I
hope this helps a little.


Mike Tupker

-----Original Message-----
From: dave kleiman [mailto:dave@davekleiman.com] 
Sent: Thursday, July 27, 2006 4:48 PM
To: focus-ms@securityfocus.com
Subject: MS Exchange


Can anyone recommend a auto-signature application that adds signatures
to
outgoing email and those annoying legal disclaimers?

It needs to black the user from making changes to the sig / disclaimer. 

Additionally, it needs to pull variables from AD (e.g. Organization,
Title,
Department)

Most important, it needs to work! I have tried a couple and they crashed
and
burned, either the sig did not pull AD info properly or the user could
override it.


Respectfully,

Dave Kleiman


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