E-Mail Controls in Office 2003 443
TiggsPanther writes "The BBC's Technology News reports than the next version of MS Office will include E-Mail controls which should limit way that e-mail messages can be forwarded.
Being tied into the Information Rights Management concept, it might be interesting to see how quickly this gets taken up."
but but but.... (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.msnbc.com/news/982713.asp?0dm=T15NT [msnbc.com]
fp?
Dialog Box (Score:5, Informative)
If you use the e-mail DRM service(straight from the dialog box):
- You need a
- Your documents won't be sent to or stored by Microsoft.
- If Microsoft decides to end the trial, you can access the restricted documents and e-mail for at least three months, as long your
- Microsoft won't decrypt contect protected by the service unless a court order requires it.
I read something about being able to use DRM within an organization, but that it required running some sort of IRM server. Don't know anything else beyond that though.
Re:Dialog Box (Score:2)
oh, WELL! ... THAT's good news!
!!
NOT
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Dialog Box (Score:5, Interesting)
This sounds like that phone plan where you only get the discounted rates if you get all your friends to sign up with the same plan. Except in this case the rates aren't any cheaper.
Re:Dialog Box (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Dialog Box (Score:2)
Ya: they're working hard on tying the client to the server. For those who are happy with proprietary vendor lock-in, there is a lot to be said for these features. In another one, we were looking recently at ways to reduce the number of email attachments as some people had mailboxes over 2GB. Microsoft are working on client-server integr
Re:Dialog Box (Score:2)
$400 for a Dialog Box??? (Score:2)
Do you think Office 2003 will improve office productivity? (not Office productivity, just your real office)
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Re:Dialog Box (Score:5, Insightful)
And there you have it. There is a back door in this here DRM technology, "just in case" of course... So not only is this technology flawed, even by DRM standards, but the necessary tools to circumvent it will be hitting your local dodgy site in 5... 4...
Re:Dialog Box (Score:2)
Microsoft has also tweaked Word, Excel and Powerpoint, though the most obvious change is a new, blue colour scheme.
Wow, upgrade immediately for useless email DRM and a new blue color scheme! Seriously, Office is pretty much a fully mature product. How long will it be before people realize that upgrading to the new $300 office suit will not enhance their productivity? My company upgraded to Office XP from Office 2000 last year. All I noticed were new annoying "helpful"
Re:Dialog Box (Score:3, Insightful)
If anything, this may give stupid senders a false sense of security. They may think "Well, since I put limits on this email it will never get out." Right. What about copy/paste? Ok, they probably disable copy/paste in the window context. What about a print
Re:Dialog Box (Score:3)
Or the ultimate un-stoppable copy device..... a camera.
Re:Dialog Box (Score:4, Insightful)
Phase 1: Create an e-mail format only your program can read.
Phase 2: Use that leverage to force organizations using the products of your competitors (e.g. Lotus) to switch to your product.
Phase 3: PROFIT!
Re:Dialog Box (Score:3, Interesting)
The requirement of a
Re:Dialog Box (Score:2)
Only looking out for themselves with this (Score:2, Interesting)
Wang33
Re:Only looking out for themselves with this (Score:5, Interesting)
Why do you assume that? Why do you assume that the print function will be enabled for protected emails or other documents?
Now, I grant you that no technological scheme can completely prevent information from being leaked - it can't stop me taking it down with paper and pen, or photographing the screen, etc, but it can at least make it difficult to do. Also, while the photogrpah would be harder to refute, my hand-written scrawl copy of an email could easily be dismissed as a forgery...
I can see this being very useful for companies and even some individuals, but essentially, there is no technological way of protecting data from redistribution by its intended recipient. It's not going to be as easy as just hitting print, though.
Re:Only looking out for themselves with this (Score:2)
your photo would btw have the same amount of credibility(? right word?) as your hand written scrawl.
but i guess he assumes that things could be printed because phb's want stuff to be printed.
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Re:Only looking out for themselves with this (Score:2)
And the same credibility as that file on your floppy disk which you _claim_ was an email from Bill Gates. A jury of idiots might be convinced, but anyone can write an 'email' in Notepad and stick Gates' name in the header.
The amusing thing is that this could actually have the opposite effect to the one intended, by making it harder for PHBs to deny they sent a particular email, since faking DRM-ed Outlook
Suitable quote.. (Score:5, Insightful)
-- Bruce Schneier
Re:Suitable quote.. (Score:2)
Don't feel too secure. Room 101 CAN make water not wet. The RIAA is kindly preparing you a test suite if you want to give it a try.
Re:Suitable quote.. (Score:2)
Yup; the analogy is perfect. To you, the bits on my hard drive are completely uncopyable, because you can't break into my computer any more easily than I can break into your kitchen. If I were to send you some of the bits on my hard drive, however, then any attempt I made to make them "uncopyable" would be about as effective as you sending me a cooler full of ice: it only really works as long as the recipient cooperates.
Re:Suitable quote.. (Score:5, Funny)
Hilarity ensues!
content management? (Score:3, Insightful)
How about printscreen?
Re:content management? (Score:2)
Re:content management? (Score:2, Interesting)
If print screen is disabled whenever any office product is running (aka all the time since most users leave outlook running all day), this presents a serious usability issue for the desktop and would make it time to install a 3rd party screen capture app.
Re:content management? (Score:2)
Hash, Rehash, and Dupe (Score:2)
How is this news?
Re:Hash, Rehash, and Dupe (Score:2)
It's been tried before (This Email Will Self Destruct... [slashdot.org]), but with the backing of a monopoly, it might actually take. Who else could convince users to slip into their own handcuffs?
non MS mail clients (Score:2)
Re:non MS mail clients (Score:5, Informative)
As the article stated, "Microsoft says a free viewing program will be available for those who receive a protected document but are not using Office 2003."
However, since this is squarely targeted at corporate enviornments, I don't forsee this becoming a large problem.
Sure, it's bad for the end user information wants to be free blah blah blah, but companies want more control over where their information is going, and MS is providing it in this product. Don't want the FY04 budget leaked? Put a do-not-forward flag on it... Sure, you'll be able to screen-cap things, but casual copying will be prevented.
(We all know that protection can be circumvented by anyone with enough will... This is simply raising the bar for how much desire is necessary.)
That being said, I won't use it, but I'm sure there are corporations out there that will.
Re:non MS mail clients (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:non MS mail clients (Score:2)
Marketing uber alles (Score:2)
Really, how is this supposed to work? Even if Microsoft suppresses the clipboard for protected documents, I (or any other mildly knowledgeable user) can take a couple of screen captures and then put it into a jpg or pdf to resend. If someone can see the e-mail, there's a way to copy it.
Ah... so maybe the idea is, *they* sent it, so that it'll be on *my* machine, but *they* retroactively control what I do with it, without specifying up-front. I *knew* SC
And are they going to stop you from (Score:2)
And when are they going to have the email etiquette checker working? And the filter for bad joke forwarding - thats what I really need.
Non-Outlook mail clients? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Non-Outlook mail clients? (Score:2)
corporations will be all over this... (Score:2)
mostly i imagine this will appeal to the less savory huge corporations who wish to stop seeing their internal memos and severance packages on f*ckedcompany.
but inevitably, if the information would actually be interesting to someone outside the desired recipient list, it will be shared. to borrow a cliche, 'information wants to be free' - good information anyway.
is this such a bad thing? (Score:2)
Spam is a huge problem and the only way it is going to be effectively controlled is to change the open nature of email. Putting controls onto who can do what to the email is the next step. You don't always want emails to be forwarded especially if the email is signed from you. The same goes for company internal
Re:is this such a bad thing? (Score:2)
The new DRM features have absolutely nothing to do with spam. How is spam related to your forwarded e
Wrong (Score:4, Funny)
Uh, no. Nothing is foolproof because fools are just too damned clever.
Why bother? (Score:2)
Good unintended side effects (Score:2, Insightful)
Anyway, this who "can't forward" thing might have nice side effects. I'd love it if documents on the hard drive could be flagged "do not forward", so my dad would stop pestering me about "what if I get a vir
Simple question: (Score:5, Insightful)
Simple answer: No, it would reduce it.
Thanks for another useless product.
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Yeah, and it'll stop paraphrasing too. Not. (Score:5, Insightful)
Great having beers with you last night.
I just got a memo that they'll be laying off 30 people in engineering, starting with Dan. The fucktards have disabled forwarding permissions for it, but drop by my desk on your way to lunch if you want to see.
Ron
Re:Yeah, and it'll stop paraphrasing too. Not. (Score:5, Funny)
Of course, it will if MS makes wearing a DRM Helmet [oreillynet.com] part of the EULA.
Isn't this what /.'ers want? (Score:2)
Well, Microsoft did it -- you'll see the amount of encrypted email increase substantially as companies adopt this new version of Office and implement their own identity management servers.
So what's the big hub-ubb? If you are being investigated, a court order will result in the police getting your GPG/PGP private key anyway, so that
Been There, Done That in Lotus Notes (Score:5, Informative)
With notes, you could still grab a screen shot by pressing "Print Scrn", since that's tied into the OS, not the app.
Re:Been There, Done That in Lotus Notes (Score:2)
Re:Been There, Done That in Lotus Notes (Score:2)
Not if your window is out of focus. I haven't messed with Windows signals for a while but I don't think your app would even receive the interrupt, would it?
Re:Been There, Done That in Lotus Notes (Score:2)
Gimme! (Score:2)
I hope they include a control that prevents email from being forwarded once the subject line contains more than one Fwd: in it.
I swear, many days I get more "Fwd: Fwd: Fwd: Fwd: Fwd: Fwd: THIS COULD SAVE SOMEONE'S LIFE!" than I do spam. The latest and greatest is the "gang initiation - guy sneaks into a woman's backseat at the gas pump", which I haven't seen making the rounds for a coupl
Not a completely new feature (Score:2)
Worm ? (Score:3, Funny)
should limit way that e-mail messages can be forwarded.
But it won't stop Outlook to be vulnerable to any kind of attack, such as a worm which "forwards" itself to everybody in your address book ?
And in other news .... (Score:2)
Drive people nuts... (Score:2)
Should be good for a chuckle or two.
Text-To-Speech (Score:2, Funny)
If they disable features for the blind, sue Microsoft.
PROFIT!
And non- Windows-2000+ platforms? (Score:3, Interesting)
Platform lockin anyone?
Having said that, it is a good idea. But totally non-enforceable without community buyin, and when you have community buyin it is easily circumventible...
Re:And non- Windows-2000+ platforms? (Score:2)
Re:And non- Windows-2000+ platforms? (Score:2)
not using Outlook? And don't tell me that'll never happen if the software allows it , of course it will. Its all pointless apart from the encryption since you can never guarantee
what client the recipient will be using. This is just more blah blah for MS to put on the box when flogging Office to the gullible.
Re:And non- Windows-2000+ platforms? (Score:3, Insightful)
Then you don't encrypt it. Duh.
If you want to make a point, be sure you have one to make before trying.
Re:And non- Windows-2000+ platforms? (Score:2)
They use an internet explorer plug-in to read your document. Essentially the same as if you sent a PDF or flash document.
Or, alternately, you can just turn the darn thing off for that message.
As for it being "easily circumventable"--while you'll always be able to pick up a digital camera, they can (at least on Windows) block the text-select and print-screen functions, which will easily t
Re:And non- Windows-2000+ platforms? (Score:2)
If you're familiar with DVD restrictions, this is like CSS, which uses encryption, rather than region encoding, which uses the honor system. If some idiot sends me one of these messages, it will look like gibberish, probably preceded by an advertisement encouraging me to register for a .NET passport account.
I don't think "enforceable" is the right word, here. In my mind, this is less about forcing DRM on us, than it is about embracing and extending for the
Some facts (Score:4, Informative)
1. IRM allows you to block forwarding of a message.
2. IRM allows you to block printing of a message.
3. Cut and paste is disabled for protected messages.
4. You cannot get round it by using a non-MS mail client, the client will simply not be able to open the email at all.
5. Screenshots are feasible but how many large corporations filter images in email sent externally? I know we do!
This is not going to be as trivial to work round as many are suggesting.
Re:Some facts (Score:2)
Result - point-and-click copying of these alledgly 'protected' emails. Remember if you can see or hear it, then it can be easily copied.
Re:Some facts (Score:3, Funny)
The real agenda? (Score:5, Insightful)
>Microsoft says a free viewing program will be available for those who receive a protected document but are not using Office 2003.
Why would one need a special reader if email standards are adhered to? Presumably this is an attempt to hijack the email system by getting all Office users to send email in a format which is unreadable by non-Office users. The only way to read email from a windows user will be to get a copy of Office 2003.
Personally I will be replying to all such emails with a polite message that the message got garbled in transmision and could the sender please fix the problem in their system.
Re:The real agenda? (Score:3, Interesting)
Hate mail: If a (criminal) employee sends another employee hate mail or simply inapropriate mail that (s)he can't print, forward or save the company will be sued (eventually) for creating a hostile work environment.
Legality: Self destructing communication is almost certainly illegal where it concerns the company's finances, policies, environmental records etc.
Security1: A false sense of security will encourage people to writ
Re:The real agenda? (Score:3, Insightful)
But you are blind to the real agenda: kill off whistleblowers, the only true heros in the corporate/government world. A person with actual ethics and morals would spill the beans on M$ illegalities (or DOJ unethical behavior, or Administration illegal behavior). M$ seeks to make this impossible as all internal emails will be unprintable, unforwardable, uncopyable.
There is no legitimate purpose for this other than to kill the ability of people of ethics standing in the way of unethical behavior. M$ wan
Re: (Score:2)
Mute the world (Score:2, Interesting)
You know, I use something like this (Score:2)
But it's called GnuPG. It keeps people from reading my emails if I don't want them to. Come to think of it, it's on by default on Evolution and Mozilla mail.
What's to stop.. (Score:2)
If you can read it, you can circumvent this.
Can someone let me know (Score:2)
Typical slimy behaviour (Score:5, Interesting)
There is nothing here--NOTHING--that can't be done with existing protocols. PGP anyone (or GPG if you prefer)? I seem to recall that it had a 'read-don't-save' flag that you could set.
Furthermore, this won't help anyways. Hasn't anyone heard of screencaptures?
This new "feature" has no purpose other than to lock people into MS Office even further. It's a political trojan horse.
This isn't Email (Score:3, Interesting)
It stores the material on the server, and truely just sends a notification to someone. The notification itself is email, but that's where email ends and DRM begins. Since the email is really just a link to a server where the document can be viewed, it can't be viewed by "untrusted" platforms.
This is why these emails are only accessible by people with certain operating systems that can be "trusted". Since they can never truely lock out any MS OS short of W2K or XP (arguable on those as well), they aren't going to have a client for anything else. Even with these you'll have to have the client DRM software. You know the software that intercepts calls for things like "print screen", the software that could only be written in Redmond?
This is one way for Microsoft to get the masses to install DRM enforcement software. You know that new job your looking at? The one that requires completing paperwork through a DRM compliant system?
There is a reason that this feature requires Server 2003 and so on, it is because it is an interlocking and interdependent license obtainment system. So the question becomes, since this isn't email, what do you call a centralized document viewing system?
Re:not going to stop leaks (Score:5, Informative)
Re:not going to stop leaks (Score:2, Insightful)
casual forwarding is not a problem, its malicious forwarding it needs to hinder
Re:not going to stop leaks (Score:2, Funny)
Re:not going to stop leaks (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:not going to stop leaks (Score:4, Insightful)
When I worked in corporateworld, casually forwarded emails made up about 50% of my total email workload - I must have wasted about an hour a day on that crap. Sure it's a problem!
Of course, it doesn't look like this new MS stuff is going to solve that problem, as most people aren't going to bother to specify the 'no forward' option. In fact, I think that there isn't really a technological solution - it's a cultural issue.
Re:not going to stop leaks (Score:2)
If I need it, and I can see it, I will get it.
Re:not going to stop leaks (Score:2)
Re:not going to stop leaks (Score:2)
What if you do a reply with quote then copy from the edit box? That works in Lotus Notes, that's had this functionality for years. What if one of the recipents has a non-MS mailer? Will they be unable to read the mail or will Outlook realise that it doesn't have a key for them and send them a plain text copy, possibly throwing up a doalog box which 99.9999% of users will just click OK on without bothering to read it? For that matter how does the encryption (the messages have got to be encrypted else it
Re:not going to stop leaks (Score:2)
Now, it does make sense if the intent is to lock out competing email clients. And as email is more and more a necessary business tool, this could be leveraged to force companies to use Outlook if they want to communicate with (the majority of large US) companies who use Outlook.
Re:Cutting and Pasting (Score:3, Interesting)
Better yet, it could be one of those cell phone cameras. Technology gives back what technology takes away.
Re:Cutting and Pasting (Score:2)
Re:Cutting and Pasting (Score:2)
What if you work somewhere where bringing a camera to work is a cautionable offence?
Re:Cutting and Pasting (Score:2)
Re:Cutting and Pasting (Score:2)
Re:Cutting and Pasting (Score:2)
Of course, this isn't going to be designed to stop it completely, just for the average user.
I doubt it's actually encrypted in any way.
Notes tried this one too (Score:2)
Cut and paste were disabled, as I recall. A quick PrintScreen twarted that quite quickly.
If you see it on the screen, it can be copied. Perhaps not as well, but yep, it can be copied.
Re:Notes tried this one too (Score:2)
--RJ
Re:O2003 DRM (Score:2)
Re:Another example of Microsoft "innovation" (Score:2, Funny)
See.. they always said the BSOD was a feature !!
Paul.
Re:New features? (Score:2)
Granted these are remote images rather than embedded.
Re:Hrm (Score:2)
Re:Biggest Outlook Beef (Score:3, Insightful)