You are here: silicon.com > Comment & Analysis

Comment & Analysis

Email deities and broadband deaths

Playing god - and meeting god...

By editorial@silicon.com

Published: 22 October 2002 16:20 GMT

Security company Indicii Salus has released research that shows people care more about the sanctity of snail mail than email. It seems we are more likely to snoop at correspondence when it is on someone's monitor or in a shared inbox than when it comes through the front door.

But the most interesting part of the survey was buried further down the release which accompanied the findings. Given email's place in the modern office, email administrators have in many companies taken on god-like status. The survey claims the IT department has become the most respected source of company information - or gossip.

Want to know about the pay review, the possible acquisition, whether Jill in accounts really did go home with Bill in engineering last Friday? Ask Steve in IT.

The moral here? Whatever you care to send electronically, be reminded of a techie we saw at a security conference a few years back. Very tall, with long curly hair and a thousand yard stare, his T-shirt simply read: "I read your email."

You've been warned.

Death by broadband?

There is a Japanese expression for people who die from working too hard. (A silicon.com mouse mat goes to the person who can remember what it is.) Soon, perhaps, there will have to be an expression - in several languages - for someone who dies from using the internet too much.

Earlier this month, a Korean man died after 96 hours at a PC bang (cybercafe) terminal. Now a 27-year-old Taiwanese surfer has overdosed online after a similar, 32 hour gaming session.

It won't take long for people to make the 'broadband can kill you' connection - both countries are at the top of the world rankings for broadband penetration. But perhaps anyone jumping to such a conclusion should note the men were both in very public places. Curtailing home net use wouldn't have helped.

We can already hear the comments about rationing some dial-up internet access packages...

  1. Zones
  2. Management
  3. Networks
  4. Software
  5. IT Services
  6. Hardware
  1. Verticals
  2. Public Sector
  3. Financial Services
  4. Retail & Leisure

  • Jobs
Care System Implementation - Contract - Public Sector - London

My client is looking for a consultant who has experience of implementing the Saturn Care system. They are looking to develop this system and upgrade ...

Check Team Leader / Check Team Member

One of our key clients is an independent, stable and well respected corporate data security specialist with a burgeoning Penetration Testing and ...

Senior Account Manager - Promotional Merchandise - 30000

Benefits: The right candidate will be getting their foot in the door at a company that is going places. The role is for senior people within the ...

Agenda Setters 2009
Welcome to the ninth annual Agenda Setters poll – silicon.com's list of the top 50 most influential individuals in the technology and IT industries, from techies and CIOs to entrepreneurs and business leaders. Find out more in our latest special report.





Quick Sitemap Links: