How do I securely delete e-mail

G

Guest

I will be looking forward to it. I just tried to add my email to your
newsletter subscription list and I keep getting Please check the sender's
email address setting.
Please click here to try again. When I click there it takes me back to your
home address. Any suggestions? Thanks, Michael and thanks again for your
assistance.



Roady said:
"Roady, when will your books on Outlook 2007 Professional be ready?"
No official plans or deal yet but maybe end this year. I want it to include
Service Pack 1 changes as mainstream deployment always takes off after the
first SP. I'm currently working on my master thesis (on mobility) so that
has the main priority. When the plans become more official I'll make sure I
post it on my main page ;-)

Thanks for asking!

--
Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook]
Coauthor, Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003


-----
Michael 1952 said:
Thanks again, I quickly read the reference and bookmarked it so that I can
really read it tomorrow. It is getting late here and I am making many
typos.
My first thoughts are to what was originally suggested to use the small
disk
for pst only and use Erase on a schedule to wipe the available disk.
Again I
really appreciate the time you all have taken and the valuable information
you have provided.

Roady, when will your books on Outlook 2007 Professional be ready? Thanks
again to both of you, sincerely, Michael

Roady said:
Which brings us back to the original question; I think the IT
Professionall
was confused with Windows Vista's BitLocker feature as that provides
encryption on hardware level; pre-boot!

--
Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook]
Coauthor, Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003
http://www.howto-outlook.com/
Outlook FAQ, HowTo, Downloads, Add-Ins and more

-----
Gotcha! The best way to see if the software tool Bunting refers to can
find an email from a pst created with 'high encryption' would be for
him
to try it -- and then update that link -- or you... ;-)

'Compressible encryption' (pst default) only compesses the file -- like
WinZip -- so the contents may be scambled, but they are still
"find-able."

The other alternative -- likely best for you -- would be to use Windows
encryption on the pst file. Just don't ever lose your key. And don't
ever re-install Windows WITHOUT decrypting the pst file FIRST, or the
key
will not work and your are forever SOL. It's rock solid encryption.

See here:
http://www.microsoft.com/resources/...proddocs/en-us/encrypt_overview.mspx?mfr=true

Cipher (as he mentioned) is the command line execution for various
NTFS
encryption commands.
 
R

Roady [MVP]

Go to the about section of my website. It has an email address listed. Send
me your address and I'll add you manually and check out the issue.
(I don't post the address here or I'll be getting even more spam ;-)

Thanks!

--
Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook]
Coauthor, Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003


-----
Michael 1952 said:
I will be looking forward to it. I just tried to add my email to your
newsletter subscription list and I keep getting Please check the sender's
email address setting.
Please click here to try again. When I click there it takes me back to
your
home address. Any suggestions? Thanks, Michael and thanks again for your
assistance.



Roady said:
"Roady, when will your books on Outlook 2007 Professional be ready?"
No official plans or deal yet but maybe end this year. I want it to
include
Service Pack 1 changes as mainstream deployment always takes off after
the
first SP. I'm currently working on my master thesis (on mobility) so that
has the main priority. When the plans become more official I'll make sure
I
post it on my main page ;-)

Thanks for asking!

--
Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook]
Coauthor, Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003


-----
Michael 1952 said:
Thanks again, I quickly read the reference and bookmarked it so that I
can
really read it tomorrow. It is getting late here and I am making many
typos.
My first thoughts are to what was originally suggested to use the small
disk
for pst only and use Erase on a schedule to wipe the available disk.
Again I
really appreciate the time you all have taken and the valuable
information
you have provided.

Roady, when will your books on Outlook 2007 Professional be ready?
Thanks
again to both of you, sincerely, Michael

:

Which brings us back to the original question; I think the IT
Professionall
was confused with Windows Vista's BitLocker feature as that provides
encryption on hardware level; pre-boot!

--
Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook]
Coauthor, Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003
http://www.howto-outlook.com/
Outlook FAQ, HowTo, Downloads, Add-Ins and more

-----
Gotcha! The best way to see if the software tool Bunting refers to
can
find an email from a pst created with 'high encryption' would be for
him
to try it -- and then update that link -- or you... ;-)

'Compressible encryption' (pst default) only compesses the file --
like
WinZip -- so the contents may be scambled, but they are still
"find-able."

The other alternative -- likely best for you -- would be to use
Windows
encryption on the pst file. Just don't ever lose your key. And
don't
ever re-install Windows WITHOUT decrypting the pst file FIRST, or
the
key
will not work and your are forever SOL. It's rock solid encryption.

See here:
http://www.microsoft.com/resources/...proddocs/en-us/encrypt_overview.mspx?mfr=true

Cipher (as he mentioned) is the command line execution for various
NTFS
encryption commands.
 

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