Hello Dwight! On Saturday, September 28, 2002 at 7:05:33 AM you wrote:
> there are lots of work arounds. some are better than others. but the > bottom line is that once the mail has been received, it belongs to the > recipient, not the sender As I wrote in another message that is plainly wrong. Any written text belongs to its originator regardless of where the physical evidence is stored. You can, for instance, not publish a letter you received without the prior consent of the sender - as you cannot change the contents he made up. You can annotate it, but only in a way which shows that the annotated text is not by you and has not been changed by anyone else but the author (except he ave you the rights to do so). And that is exactly what is achieved by TB!'s Memo feature. -- Dierk Haasis http://www.Write4U.de http://Zoo.Write4U.de PGP keys available: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]?Subject=SendMyPGPkeys The Bat 1.61 on Windows 95 4.0 1212 C Respect Yourself. (Pops Staples) ________________________________________________ Current version is 1.61 | "Using TBUDL" information: http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html