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Re: Anonymous Remailers at work
> Date: Tue, 06 Aug 1996 21:05:24 -0700
> To: [email protected]
> From: Bill Stewart <[email protected]>
> Subject: Anonymous Remailers at work
> I've recently run into a couple of business problems at work
> that could be solved by (slightly modified) remailers.
> 1) Manager performance review, suggestion boxes, and questions to
> visiting honchos - there are several departments that are using
> "email to the secretary who'll take your name off and forward it"
> to handle this problem. Remailers are an obvious solution.
> It would probably be worth modifying the remailer to use a permit-list
> as well as a block-list for destinations and maybe sources,
> Any other reasons to install anonymous remailers at work,
> and things you'd do to make them more attractive or
> less scary to corporate network administrative types?
I have a very crude + simple remailer using shell scripts.
There is re-ordering and a standard message size.
There is no scope for receipts or replies.
I limit messages to 1kb to make it harder to send images.
(There was once a management complaint about images- nothing
to do with me or the remailer which hadn't started then.)
It can only send and receive mail INSIDE the company.
I have not advertised it widely, for fear of a management veto.
It carries a warning to be sensible, and I'd be able to read
the mail log following complaints.
There is a short banned list, intended only to stop looping.
In another message Bill said:
> immigrant Brits and ... speaking funny-soundin' English at you.
Um, some of us really do speak English. To the point where we struggle
to make out Larry King and guest both mumbling away at high speed.