I would bet if you gave me your employers name and I informed him that your
are sending email by passing his port blocking you would be reprimanded.
Your employer is blocking the port for a reason. Most likely to prevent you
from doing what you are doing and not doing you daily job to your utmost.
----- Original Message -----
From: <rogerk(_at_)queernet(_dot_)org>
To: <spf-discuss(_at_)v2(_dot_)listbox(_dot_)com>
Cc: <spf-discuss(_at_)v2(_dot_)listbox(_dot_)com>
Sent: Wednesday, July 28, 2004 10:29 AM
Subject: Re: [spf-discuss] Re: Military
Quoting Paul Ficinski <spf(_at_)fairymouse(_dot_)com>:
Well *you* used a webmail client to write your email...
Under duress, because my employer blocks all useful ports but does not
have a
policy that bans use of personal email. If personal email were banned,
I'd
stop. As is, by putting in place a technical roadblock instead of an
appropriate policy roadblock, they push me to spend 3x the time I would
use
with a good tool interacting with webmail.
Webmail is popular with some providers - take hotmail to be one very
obvious example.
It doesn't matter what's popular with a provider -- it matters what
clients WANT
to use. Webmail is popular with Hotmail users because it used to be all
they
had, and it is all they really promote.
-------
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