Slashdot Mirror


Accidental Privacy Spills

ahem writes "A journalist attends the World Economic forum, and writes an email to a few friends. It's a chatty, casual conference report. The conference is a gathering of the 5,000 most powerful people in the world. The report gives a breezy insight into how stuff gets done at that level, and what the concerns are that keep the world's leaders up at night. That email was intended only for the journalist's friends. That email winds up getting plastered all over the net. Here is a very interesting discussion of the implications of this "privacy spill." Make sure you read down to the Epilogue. Here is the email itself." The Lawmeme discussion is quite thoughtful and in-depth, very good reading.

3 of 573 comments (clear)

  1. I'm concerned about email privacy, too by pyramid+termite · · Score: 5, Funny

    How the hell do all these people know I have a small penis?

  2. Reading email violates the DMCA. . . by Limburgher · · Score: 4, Funny
    Since it involved decoding MIME info.

    Redistributing is an even bigger no-no. . .:)P

    --

    You are not the customer.

  3. Insundry? by FunnyPolynomial · · Score: 4, Funny

    From the original email: "...various insundry countries...".
    S/he's a reporter but thinks "insundry" is a word? The phrase is "...and sundry".
    But wait, it gets funnier, I googled (tm) for "insundry" and got more than 100 hits. I guess a lot of people hear "and sundry" as "insundry". Is there a word for that? It's like a meme, but it's something you've heard. A heme! Oh, wait. Taken. A misspelleme?

    --
    // todo: implement sig