Neitiquette and email file attachments
Netiquette and email attachmnets - some guidelines
"Getting information off the internet
is like taking a drink from a fire hydrant."
- Mitchell Kapor
Attachments
Uses
of attachments greatly enhance the flexibility capabilities and even potential
hazards of email. Due to the significant
differences and compatibilities of different mail programs, many items such as
tables, charts, documents with advanced formatting and items which require or
demand editing integrity attachments are critical to communication dynamics. Nonetheless, many obstacles and potential for
problems exist when utilizing attachments. What follows are examples where
attachments can manifest poor results and loss of productivity or worse.For many, attachment size is not a problem. For many others, it is a consideration which may have even a greater negative effect than a file attribute or format. Many internet service providers (ISP's) have limitation for file size or mailbox size. Large files can be rejected altogether or they may exhaust allotment of mailbox capacity. Thusly, a recipient may not even know a message was sent and rejected. Large attachments, even when accepted, might fill the recipient mailbox which will result in disruption of their service. Finally, small laptops or most smart phones could have performance issues when attachments are opened. There are several ways to avoid the pitfalls of attachment size. The first is to be selective when sending large files or multiple smaller ones. In the former case, many files can be significantly reduced by file compression programs of which there are many. At least one of the popular ones is resident on most desktops or laptops. If other formats for document size reduction are appropriate such as .PDF, this is a very good approach. In the case of the later multiple attachment email, simply sending multiple messages with fewer attachments per email is practical, straight forward and sure to reduce or eliminate the stress of unwieldy attachments.
Potential
hazards of attachments
Most
attachments are simply a means of document delivery. However, it has also become commonplace for
some to use attachments to launch cyber attacks typically with executable code
which produce many varied effects, some highly destructive and malicious. When a recipient receives a suspicious
attachment, it should be scanned and, unless it is from a trusted source, not
opened. Some corporations, hosting
companies and ISPs (internet service providers) will block, quarantine or
remove files with specifically identified file extensions. It is beneficial to realize at least some of
these to prevent inadvertent file removal.
Care should be taken as well not to forward such messages without a
security scan.
1.
Do
not send attachments that are not needed.
2.
Do
not return attachments when replying.
The original sender knows what they attached.
Finally,
when attachments are sent, some may have similar names to other files on the
sender's system. With an inadvertent
slip, the wrong attachment may go out perhaps a compromising or confidential
document. Therefore, opening attachments
to validate they are appropriate and correct is critical to a proper email
process.
Titles
of attachments are often visible in a mailbox preview mode. These titles can be very important for a
number of reasons. Primarily an accurate
and appropriately named attachment will encourage the recipient to open the
email and read the attachment. If an attachment is not appropriately named,
opening it may be delayed, denied or dropped altogether. Some important considerations to utilize in
titling attachments are date, specific content (i.e., proposal, invoice,
resume, author and others). Avoid using
titles which are very long, contain all numeric characters, do not represent
the content or have inappropriate information.
The latter might contain dates, long since past or very generic names as
"letter", "schedule" and so forth. Maintaining a structured process such as
consecutive numbering, key defining categories, are not only useful for the
recipient but for the sender as well. It
is also important to adhere to Netiquette in attachment titles by utilizing
correct punctuation, capitalization and spelling.
Meta
data and drafts in attachments
Certain
programs can actively send all of the corrections already visible. Some programs leave hidden information which
can be retrieved. Care should be given
to prevent this as it may lead to lawsuits, security breaches or other negative
situations. Attention should be given to
"clean" these files or utilize an attachment format which will erase
the meta data. Even better converting
attachments to a .pdf or other unchangeable file format eliminates this danger.
"Do's" for attachments
|
"Don'ts" for attachments
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·
Be consistent with names or
descriptions
|
·
Have too few or too many
characters
|
·
Verify an attachment need
|
·
Do not send "v"
card attachments unless requested
|
·
Capitalize the title
|
·
Reply to someone with the
attachment they sent you
|
·
"Zip" or compress
large files
|
·
Send attachments with
possible compromising meta data
|
·
Use universal formats
|
|
·
Clean Meta data
|
|
·
Title possessions for
convenience in storage
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