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Re: disclaimer



Makes it a little hard to do business if the email attachment is your
price quote and you're required by law or policy to include a printed copy
with your requisition for a purchase order otherwise the vendor won't get
its invoice paid.

 -- Michele Newberry
     FCLA

> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> Date: Fri, 22 Aug 2003 16:42:17 -0400 (EDT)
> From: Ann Okerson <ann.okerson@yale.edu>
> To: liblicense-l@lists.yale.edu
> Subject: disclaimer
>
> Though a little off-topic, the e-mail disclaimer below might interesting
> for readers of this list.  It is not from a law firm!  See especially
> second paragraph about viruses; are any e-resource vendors making these
> kinds of disclaimers about their content?
>
> *******
>
> ________________ Company monitors and reads all emails as only business
> emails are permitted to be sent and received. ___________________Company
> also monitors emails for compliance reasons and to ensure that no
> unauthorized disclosure of confidential information is passed via the
> email system.  This email and any attachments are confidential. It is
> intended for the recipient only. If you are not the intended recipient,
> any use, disclosure, distribution, printing or copying of this email is
> unauthorized.  If you have received this email in error please immediately
> notify the sender by replying to this email and delete the email from your
> computer.
>
> The contents of any attachment to this email may contain software viruses,
> which could damage your own computer system. While _______________Company
> has taken every reasonable precaution to minimize this risk, we cannot
> accept liability for any damage, which you sustain as a result of software
> viruses. You should carry out your own virus checks before opening the
> attachment.
>
> ***