Tim:
> > I don't actually know what you mean by organisation-sensitive or
> > sensitivity level, I can only guess.

Jeffrey Walton:
> <https://www.google.com/search?q=data+classification+and+sensitivity+levels>.

Yes, I mentioned classifications further below in my email.  The
organisation-sensitive one was a new one on me (R&D only?  LegalDept
only?).  Though, without the original poster responding, I don't know
if it's just about labelling the messages or is meant to enforce
controls.

I suspect it's merely a label and application-specific.  The moment you
email someone without the requisite software it's going to get ignored.

Like typing "private and confidential" at the top of a letter, it does
little more than advise the person reading it.

They're likely to find that if their organisation requires access
controls, they probably require specific approved software.  One that's
been vetted and tested and they don't want to pay to test anything
else.  Amusingly, it'll probably be some Microsoft app that's approved,
despite it having numerous other major security flaws that should get
it vetoed.

https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2156#section-5.3.4
https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc4021#section-2.1.55

Seem to indicate it's only going to be a label in the header.  Someone
in a committee is probably going to get their knickers in a twist
insisting something actually useless must be mandated.

Going back to serious mode:  I see nothing in Evolution that offers the
feature, except for appointments in the calendar.  You'd probably have
to have a custom plug-in created.  That, or some kind of automatic
processing done by the mail server looking for keywords to trigger it
(such as choosing different boilerplate signatures, to give a simple
way to choose an option in the message editor).

I think this is another of those things that is glossed over in email, 
like how damn difficult it is to do secure mail (it's still definitely
computer nerd territory to encrypt emails).



> (I would have sent it privately, but emails to your email address bounced).

The list replaces my from address with its own, so that won't work.  I
know why it does that, in general, just not specifically why it does
that to mine (they're posted directly through a major server that
requires me to login).  Not that I care, I'm happy with it doing that.

If people read my boilerplate they'd see they can't reply privately, in
any way.
 
-- 
 
uname -rsvp
Linux 3.10.0-1160.119.1.el7.x86_64 #1 SMP Tue Jun 4 14:43:51 UTC 2024 x86_64
 
Boilerplate:  All unexpected mail to my mailbox is automatically deleted.
I will only get to see the messages that are posted to the mailing list.
 

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