It wouldn't take more than one or two errors of a seriously confidential
nature to wreck your reputation.
Thanks,
Richard Thieme
> There are online file exchange services, of course, which also allows
> one to send very large files.
...to the wrong person. ;)
I think just as resumes or completed translation projects have been
mistakenly sent to the list, the wrong files may occasionally be sent to
the wrong clients. Tim's idea for client-specific file names is a good
one. I don't do that (preferring to keep the same file name as the
original, plus an _en footer to denote the translated version), but you
can bet I double- and triple-check my mail just before I hit that Send
button. The original file names themselves point rather specifically to
a particular client anyway.
Nora
--
Nora Stevens Heath <no...@fumizuki.com>
J-E translations: http://www.fumizuki.com/
I recently had the embarrassing experience of sending the wrong file to the
wrong client. Fortunately it was a magazine article and not very
confidential, but I am wondering what people are doing to prevent this type
of thing from occurring.
Several times I've still managed to send the wrong file, or
no file. But at least it always goes to the right client.
--
Tom Donahue
Based on my limited experience, it's harder to make such a mistake
and easier to correct it once you catch it.
Laurie Berman
berma...@comcast.net
> they would not email or even fax me the source text.
I can understand that. It's surprising how much confidential
information comes to our fax machine. Somewhere out there
we must be registered in the 短縮ダイヤル buttons next to a
number of end clients.
--
Tom Donahue
> I can understand that. It's surprising how much confidential
> information comes to our fax machine. Somewhere out there
> we must be registered in the 短縮ダイヤル buttons next to a
> number of end clients.
Yeah, no kidding. I keep getting people's lab reports, intended for
some doctor with a number similar to mine. Not cool!
PGP/GPG and encrypt said email/file with the public key of the appropriate
client. If you send it to the wrong person, they cannot open it. Bit of an
overhead, but if it is truly confidential then this is peanuts in order to
safeguard your client's data and your reputation.
--
Jeroen Ruigrok van der Werven <asmodai(-at-)in-nomine.org> / asmodai
イェルーン ラウフロック ヴァン デル ウェルヴェン
http://www.in-nomine.org/ | http://www.rangaku.org/ | GPG: 2EAC625B
A liar needs a good memory...