@FractalBob - This then creates an interesting problem in relying on email in a legal environment. Are you sure that no header information is changed on either side (sender or receiver).
@cbcalkins8620 I'm not a lawyer, but it seems to me that there's no problem in changing e-mail, as long as the e-mail in question hasn't previously been entered into evidence in a court of law. The philosophy here is that the sender of an e-mail owns the e-mail at all times, even after it has been sent. However, once it becomes evidence, I believe changing it would be fraudulent.
@FractalBob - I can't imagine that there are no signs of 'changes made' in the email of the recipient. I'll bet that if the recipient receives a 'change' to his/her original email (by using your program), that there is traffic of some sort being entered on an email server. I am mostly concerned with the traces that are left after a change is made. If the email header is not changed, I think the email server will show some additional traffic to the email recepient, right?
@FractalBob - What happens if the recepient closes their email client, Outlook, for example and then turns it on the following day. Then, on that following day, a change using your program is made. Is there still no trace?
that is cool
slugiscool99 5 days ago
Now available for Microsoft Outlook 2007 and 2010. Check it out now!
Coming soon: dynamic content for Thunderbird 3!
FractalBob 10 months ago
It doesn't work with Thunderbird 3.1.2.
I try to install it but the program says it's incompatible with 3.1.2.
vigcs 1 year ago
@vigcs That is correct: the current version only works with Thunderbird Version 2.
FractalBob 1 year ago
Is an entry made in the email header when a change is made using this program ?
cbcalkins8620 1 year ago
@cbcalkins8620 No. To the recipient(s), the message does not appear to have changed.
FractalBob 1 year ago
@FractalBob - This then creates an interesting problem in relying on email in a legal environment. Are you sure that no header information is changed on either side (sender or receiver).
cbcalkins8620 1 year ago
@cbcalkins8620 I'm not a lawyer, but it seems to me that there's no problem in changing e-mail, as long as the e-mail in question hasn't previously been entered into evidence in a court of law. The philosophy here is that the sender of an e-mail owns the e-mail at all times, even after it has been sent. However, once it becomes evidence, I believe changing it would be fraudulent.
FractalBob 1 year ago
@FractalBob - I can't imagine that there are no signs of 'changes made' in the email of the recipient. I'll bet that if the recipient receives a 'change' to his/her original email (by using your program), that there is traffic of some sort being entered on an email server. I am mostly concerned with the traces that are left after a change is made. If the email header is not changed, I think the email server will show some additional traffic to the email recepient, right?
cbcalkins8620 1 year ago
@cbcalkins8620 No. The mail server does not detect any change whatsoever.
FractalBob 1 year ago
@FractalBob - What happens if the recepient closes their email client, Outlook, for example and then turns it on the following day. Then, on that following day, a change using your program is made. Is there still no trace?
cbcalkins8620 1 year ago
@cbcalkins8620 Correct.
FractalBob 1 year ago
@cbcalkins8620 Check out the ChiaraMail site for an explanation of how this works. It should answer all your questions.
FractalBob 1 year ago
Comment removed
cbcalkins8620 1 year ago