At Least I Get That Part Now
Bits and Pieces 2013-03-11
Summary:
In the blog post below, I wondered parenthetically,
(Don't ask me why the fact that you have no email privacy as a Harvard employee is kept secure behind a login wall.)I got an email from someone I don't know, offering an explanation, and here quote it with permission:
While I am not an attorney, I believe the reason the University policy is only accessible through logon is that this provides the administration with a record of folks who have accessed the policy, thereby potentially limiting the ability of people to claim they were not aware of the policy.That is to say, they want to make sure you can't privately access the information that your email is not private, because they want to be able to prove later on that you knew it wasn't private. I don't know that that is accurate, of course; just a conjecture. But it sounds right. If it is true, I wonder if they do page-level tracking (the employee email policy is part of the employment handbook, which has a table of contents breaking it down into about a dozen web pages). Thanks very much to the gentleman who gave me this suggestion. And welcome to the corporate university.