The Wall Street Journal
published an article on the front page of the Personal Journal (page D1)
entitled “This E-mail Will Self Destruct” that discusses RPost and the
Registered E-mail® service. Some excerpts follow, along with the full article.
WSJ page D1, August 31, 2006
Email is increasingly called on as
evidence in court, says Dana Henry, a consultant for RPost International Ltd., a
Los Angeles-based provider of "registered email" services. It is relatively easy
to change the contents of a message or say it was never delivered, says Ms.
Henry, a former Los Angeles County Superior Court judge. "There is such
incredible deniability on the part of the other party who is the recipient."
The RPost service, which also works
with Outlook, is designed to ensure the authenticity of messages so that they
can be used in legal disputes, if necessary. The program adds a unique digital
seal to each registered email. A few minutes after sending the message, the
sender receives an email receipt that includes when the message was delivered
and opened. RPost will also verify whether the original message's content was
changed. The sender can choose whether or not the email tells the recipient that
the message is registered.
The RPost service, which charges
senders 59 cents for each registered email, added a new feature in July that
checks for "risky" content, such as Social Security numbers or key words that
senders -- or the senders' employer -- have flagged, before delivering the
message. Customers, especially lawyers and technology professionals, are
interested in using the service to protect senders from email-related liability,
says RPost CEO Zafar Khan. "That can often cost the company quite a bit more,
especially in this country, in litigation and litigation-discovery costs," he
says.
For complete article,
click here.