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#1
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[apologies for multi-posting, posting to the other NG was inadvertent]
As you may know, when you digitally sign an email to an Outlook user, the signature crypto block in a signed email is sent as one part in MIME multi-part format. I can also see (using OE's distressingly more capable message source viewer) that the content-disposition of the signature block is 'attachment'. So I'm sure someone will say that it's 'correct behavior' for Outlook to show the attachment (paperclip) icon on any signed message -- but let's get real he a digital sig isn't any more an attachment, in the conventional sense, than is a TNEF block. There is no file the average user can save-off and utilize, and none of the Inspector-based UI typically associated with actual attachments is present. I see nothing positive that this UI flaw offers, but the negative aspects are quite clear: recipients are no longer able to easily identify which of my emails include a regular attachment. I send attachments with maybe 1%-10% of my outbound emails; if I sign my email, 100% look like something's attached from the Explorer view -- 90% to 99% of them look that way frivolously, meaninglessly and incorrectly. It's been like this across so many versions, it must be design -- does anyone know why this would be? Thanks, Mark McGinty |
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#2
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lucky it does or many users would not know they can save the "attached"
certificate to allow encrypted email to that person. -- Bill R MVP "Mark J. McGinty" wrote in message ... [apologies for multi-posting, posting to the other NG was inadvertent] As you may know, when you digitally sign an email to an Outlook user, the signature crypto block in a signed email is sent as one part in MIME multi-part format. I can also see (using OE's distressingly more capable message source viewer) that the content-disposition of the signature block is 'attachment'. So I'm sure someone will say that it's 'correct behavior' for Outlook to show the attachment (paperclip) icon on any signed message -- but let's get real he a digital sig isn't any more an attachment, in the conventional sense, than is a TNEF block. There is no file the average user can save-off and utilize, and none of the Inspector-based UI typically associated with actual attachments is present. I see nothing positive that this UI flaw offers, but the negative aspects are quite clear: recipients are no longer able to easily identify which of my emails include a regular attachment. I send attachments with maybe 1%-10% of my outbound emails; if I sign my email, 100% look like something's attached from the Explorer view -- 90% to 99% of them look that way frivolously, meaninglessly and incorrectly. It's been like this across so many versions, it must be design -- does anyone know why this would be? Thanks, Mark McGinty |
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Thanks for your response...
"BillR [MVP]" wrote in message ... lucky it does or many users would not know they can save the "attached" certificate to allow encrypted email to that person. But the UI to do that is not the File-Save Attachments interface, as it is with regular attachments, you must click the certificate button and edit trust (which automatically saves the cert in the appropriate store.) Clicking the File-Save Attachments menu is just a no-op -- thus much of my point of contention: if it is not treated as a regular attachment, then why the spurious paper clip? There is further UI, specific to certs, and trusting them, therefore overloading the paperclip as an additional indicator is unnecessary (as well as an interference with its intended meaning.) So I'm afraid that explanation doesn't work for me. I think OE has it right, and I wish they would fix Outlook to work correctly too (which will of course, first require them to agree it's broken, as is) some time soon. -Mark -- Bill R MVP "Mark J. McGinty" wrote in message ... [apologies for multi-posting, posting to the other NG was inadvertent] As you may know, when you digitally sign an email to an Outlook user, the signature crypto block in a signed email is sent as one part in MIME multi-part format. I can also see (using OE's distressingly more capable message source viewer) that the content-disposition of the signature block is 'attachment'. So I'm sure someone will say that it's 'correct behavior' for Outlook to show the attachment (paperclip) icon on any signed message -- but let's get real he a digital sig isn't any more an attachment, in the conventional sense, than is a TNEF block. There is no file the average user can save-off and utilize, and none of the Inspector-based UI typically associated with actual attachments is present. I see nothing positive that this UI flaw offers, but the negative aspects are quite clear: recipients are no longer able to easily identify which of my emails include a regular attachment. I send attachments with maybe 1%-10% of my outbound emails; if I sign my email, 100% look like something's attached from the Explorer view -- 90% to 99% of them look that way frivolously, meaninglessly and incorrectly. It's been like this across so many versions, it must be design -- does anyone know why this would be? Thanks, Mark McGinty |
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