http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5jTlosv9uqU7jQUMPogpOKouzppMA

By Laura Vinha (AFP) – 1 day ago

HELSINKI — Love letters, payslips and overdue bills will not be spared when
Finland's post starts opening mail and sending scanned copies to selected
recipients in a trial aimed at cutting costs and emissions.

Volunteers will receive an e-mail or a mobile phone text message when their
mail has been opened, scanned and sent as a PDF file to a secure digital
mailbox, to which only the recipient has access, a post official told AFP.

"This (secure digital mailbox) is totally different from e-mail. It is
comparable to web banking," said Tommi Tikka, development director at
state-owned Itella, which runs the Nordic country's postal system.

The "highly automated" conversion of letters into electronic documents would
be conducted in "special, secured premises" where staff are bound by strict
confidentiality obligations, Tikka said, insisting that the initiative was
not an April Fools joke.

Love letters and other personal messages would not be spared in the
experiment, which has generated lively online discussion in high-tech
Finland, home to top mobile phone maker Nokia.

"Itella is doing in Finland what the KGB did in its time in the Soviet Union
and the Stasi in East Germany. Itella is reading people's private mail," one
commentator using the name "Itella agentti", or "Itella agent", said on a
debate forum hosted by leading daily Helsingin Sanomat.

But Tikka insisted the service complied with correspondence secrecy laws and
everyone who had volunteered for the trial had signed an agreement with
Itella for their post to be opened and converted into an electronic format.

"Our workers do not read the mail. How could love letters be filtered out?"
said Tikka, adding Itella would not keep copies of letters.

"We want to find out what kind of content clients want to start receiving
electronically ... Are personal letters among those that are not wanted in a
digital form? We will find out," he said.

The size and bulk of envelopes would be analysed to filter out mail not
suited for scanning, and those obviously containing items such as bank cards
or voting ballots would not be opened, Tikka said.

So far, 126 households and 20 businesses in Anttila, an area of scattered
settlement in the southern town of Porvoo, had volunteered to join the
trial, which starts in the week of April 12 and runs until the end of the
year.

And those who long for the scent and feel of stationery need not despair:
once scanned, correspondence will be returned to its envelope and delivered
in the normal fashion.

But the postman will only call twice a week at the homes of participating
residents. Deliveries to mailboxes at a local store will be made three times
a week.

"This is purely a trial. We don't know yet whether, at the end of the year,
there will be aspects of this that could be applied more widely," Tikka
said.

The Technical Research Centre of Finland (VTT) is working with Itella to
evaluate the environmental impact of what Tikka called a "living lab
experiment".



A Montana rancher got in his pickup and drove to a neighboring ranch and
knocked at the door. A young boy, about 9, opened the door "Is your Dad
home?" the rancher asked.
"No sir, he isn't," the boy replied. "He went into town."
"Well," said the rancher, "Is your Mother here?"
"No sir, she's not here either. She went into town with Dad."
"How about your brother, Howard? Is he here?"
"No sir, He went with Mom and Dad."
The rancher stood there for a few minutes, shifting from one foot to the
other and mumbling to himself.

"Is there anything I can do for you?" the boy asked politely. "I know where
all the tools are, if you want to borrow one. Or maybe I could take a
message for Dad."
"Well," said the rancher uncomfortably, "I really wanted to talk to your
Dad. It's about your brother Howard getting my daughter, Suzie, pregnant."'
The boy considered for a moment. "You would have to talk to Pa about that",
he finally conceded. "If it helps you any, I know that Pa charges $500 for
the bull and $50 for the hog, but I really don't know how much he gets for
Howard."

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