So, as I've posted elsewhere, my employer is merging. Thursday, something small, minor, almost invisible, happened. I didn't even notice it until Friday morning. It's been bugging me since.
One of the people from the other company (I'll call him G) tried to send me an email. As it turns out, he got my last name spelled wrong, so it didn't reach me. He was using our internal email server when he did so.
I called him an hour or so later, and asked where it was. When we figured out what happened, he told me to just go into his sent items on the server and get it. Technically, as an admin for that machine, I do have that capability, but I really don't like using it. I said so, and he said it was no big deal, he had only sent like three emails. I still asked him to re-send it when he had the time.
Then, on Friday, it dawned on me: He'd asked me to open up his email account, read his email to find what I needed, and take it. He'd also done so very casually, like this was no big deal.
To me, and to the users who use the services I manage, this is a big deal. I don't invade their space except under four very specific sets of circumstances:
Outside of that, I don't go into it. It's all about trust. If my users can't trust that I'm not going to randomly read their private stuff, then they can't use those services to conduct the business they need to conduct.
The way in which he said this almost made it sound like a casual thing, not the major breach of ethics I would consider it to be.
So, my question to all of you: Am I overreacting? Should I comment on this? And, if so, to who? G? His boss? The new partner? The existing owners?
BTW, the new partner is the person overseeing all of IT. If I should approach him in particular, or G, or G's manager, I have to ask for some other advice; you see, the other company is almost entirely Jewish, and very much so. Is there any specific way I should address this due to that possible cultural difference?
One of the people from the other company (I'll call him G) tried to send me an email. As it turns out, he got my last name spelled wrong, so it didn't reach me. He was using our internal email server when he did so.
I called him an hour or so later, and asked where it was. When we figured out what happened, he told me to just go into his sent items on the server and get it. Technically, as an admin for that machine, I do have that capability, but I really don't like using it. I said so, and he said it was no big deal, he had only sent like three emails. I still asked him to re-send it when he had the time.
Then, on Friday, it dawned on me: He'd asked me to open up his email account, read his email to find what I needed, and take it. He'd also done so very casually, like this was no big deal.
To me, and to the users who use the services I manage, this is a big deal. I don't invade their space except under four very specific sets of circumstances:
- They're having a problem, and ask me to look into it.
- Something about their space is causing problems for others.
- That user's manager (or someone higher up, but still in that user's management chain) provides a written request to pull the data on the grounds that the user is doing something against company policy. Even then, for this, I'll be running it by my immediate management for a final signoff.
- ETA: If somebody leaves the company, and their job functions fall to me.
Outside of that, I don't go into it. It's all about trust. If my users can't trust that I'm not going to randomly read their private stuff, then they can't use those services to conduct the business they need to conduct.
The way in which he said this almost made it sound like a casual thing, not the major breach of ethics I would consider it to be.
So, my question to all of you: Am I overreacting? Should I comment on this? And, if so, to who? G? His boss? The new partner? The existing owners?
BTW, the new partner is the person overseeing all of IT. If I should approach him in particular, or G, or G's manager, I have to ask for some other advice; you see, the other company is almost entirely Jewish, and very much so. Is there any specific way I should address this due to that possible cultural difference?
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