from the one-way-to-deal-with-the-problem dept
Last month, the US State Department made plenty of news for threatening to
punish employees who misused the "reply-all" button on their email clients. That, by itself, seemed a bit extreme, but
Jeremy Wagstaff alerts us to the fact that some organizations are going a step further and figuring out ways to
disable the reply-all button entirely. The latest to do so is Nielsen, which did so with a cheery memo to staff explaining why this would "reduce non-essential messages in mailboxes, freeing up our time as well as server space." That's one way to think about it.
Filed Under: email, reply-all
Companies: nielsen