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Tag Archives: Spam

Why Automatic Deletion of Spam Email Causing Failure to File a Timely Appeal Is Not Excusable Neglect.

30 Saturday Sep 2017

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Calendar/Docketing, Emails, Law Office Management, Legal Ethics, Legal Technology, Office Procedures, Technology

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Appellate Procedure, Email Configuration, Excusable Neglect, Spam

(With hat tip to William P. Statsky)

My home email software has a spam folder where unwanted emails go to die – eventually. I must deliberately choose to send an email to the spam folder. Then, I must decide whether let it remain in perpetual limbo as spam, block it, or delete it.

Imagine the number of emails routinely sent and received by most law firms.  My computer’s email setup would not be practical.  But, when it comes to email configuration, there are good choices and bad ones. A Florida law firm rejected recommended safeguards to snag spam and allow someone, other than the computer, to decide whether to delete the email. That decision, along with others, turned out to be a bad call.

Here are the facts. The trial court’s court clerk served an order by email on the parties. The order awarded a significant amount of attorney fees to the appellee. The appellant claimed it did not receive the emailed order, which is why it failed timely to file an appeal. What happened? The firm’s email system automatically deleted the court clerk’s email and attached order as spam.

The appellant appealed and asked the court to vacate the original order and reenter the order to allow the appellant to appeal. Its email deletion error was “excusable neglect.” Not so said that trial court, and the Florida’s First District Court of Appeal affirmed.

The appellate court gave several specific reasons for rejecting the appellant’s argument.  First, the review of the court clerk’s email logs confirmed that the email with the court’s order was served and received by the law firm’s server. Second, the law firm’s email configuration made it impossible to determine whether the firm’s server received the email. Third, the law firm’s former IT specialist’s advice against this configuration flaw was deliberately rejected by the law firm because its alternative cost more money.

The trial court concluded the law firm made a conscious decision to use a defective email configuration merely to save money, which was not “excusable neglect.”

Another nail in the coffin was testimony by the appellee’s attorney. His firm assigned a paralegal to check the court’s website every three weeks to safeguard that his firm would not miss any orders or deadlines.  The court held that the appellant had a duty to check the court’s electronic docket.

What’s the moral here? Lawyers must configure their computer systems to prevent this costly error. And they must employ a “meaningful procedure” to prevent the series of events that caused this fatal error.

I rather liked the idea of the paralegal assigned to check the court’s online file. In this instance, the paralegal checked it every three weeks. I would modify this depending on the notice time required by your court’s rules.

I recommend reading the entire opinion for its analysis on “excusable neglect.” You can find the opinion here: http://bit.ly/2xI3gGB. -CCE

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Email Spam or Have I Got A Deal For You!

25 Friday Nov 2016

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Emails, Law Office Management, Legal Technology, Technology

≈ Comments Off on Email Spam or Have I Got A Deal For You!

Tags

Emails, Jim Calloway, Jim Calloway's Law Practice Tips Blog, Spam

The Holidays Bring More Email Threats, by Jim Calloway, Jim Calloway’s Law Practice Tips Blog

http://www.lawpracticetipsblog.com/2016/11/holidays-bring-email-threats.html

I may be the luckiest person in the world. I receive emails almost daily from people I do not know who want to give me money. I’ve won the lottery or I’m offered a fantastic job as a “mystery shopper.” And, boy, do I win a lot of stuff! Of course, none of this is true.

On the flip side, the tone may be more menacing. Emails from banks and credit cards saying they need me to respond to address a delinquent account or that someone has used my account. I do not have accounts with these folks.

Even with my firewall and my attempts to avoid viruses, Trojan horses, and other attacks on my computer, bogus emails and spam walk right in. I block these emails, mark them as “junk,” and they still come. I suspect many of you get the same things.

Make no mistake. You and I are targets. -CCE

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Wait! Don’t Click On That Link!

16 Tuesday Sep 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Computer Virus, Cybersecurity, Emails, Legal Technology, Malware, Trojans

≈ Comments Off on Wait! Don’t Click On That Link!

Tags

Email, Ian Paul, Mail Merge, Malware, PC World, Spam

Three Warning Signs That Email Is Malicious, by Ian Paul, PC World

http://tinyurl.com/lsjgxv7

Email spam filtering is far better than it used to be. There was a time when nearly every scam email would land in your inbox. Thankfully that’s not the case anymore—especially if you’re a Gmail user.

But no system is perfect. Every now and then a scam message will manage to slip into your inbox. But how do you know when you’re looking at a scam or not?

Here are three basic tip-offs you can look for to figure out whether you’re looking at an email with dishonest intentions. They’re hardly an exhaustive list, but more often than not one of these tips will save you from getting suckered. . . .

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ClearView Social App – Sharing Social Media or Spam?

24 Saturday May 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Advertising, Law Firm Web Sites, Law Office Management, Legal Blogs, Technology

≈ Comments Off on ClearView Social App – Sharing Social Media or Spam?

Tags

ClearView Social, Law Office Management, LinkedIn, Robert Ambrogi, Robert Ambrogi’s LawSites Blog, Social media, Spam, Twitter

Pseudo Social Sharing Isn’t Smart, It’s Spam, by Robert Ambrogi, Robert Ambrogi’s LawSites Blog

http://tinyurl.com/mkqjkpu

I have to admit I was taken aback by the premise of ClearView Social, the new app being developed by social marketing consultant Adrian Dayton. Targeted at medium and large firms, the app ‘helps attorneys more easily share content with their professional networks through LinkedIn, Twitter and other platforms,’ according to the press release last February.

That sounds harmless enough. But further reading reveals more about what the app does:

ClearView Social allows one person in the firm – for example, a designated marketer – to create a queue of content to be shared in an email template. When attorneys receive the email, they can click a link, which launches the application for sharing the content via various social media platforms, including LinkedIn and Twitter, which are integrated in the tool. This allows attorneys to share on those networks without leaving ClearView Social. It’s as easy as responding to an email.

So the app doesn’t actually help attorneys share content they find worthwhile. Rather, it makes the attorneys the conduits or redistributors of content someone else chooses to share. . . .

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Experienced Malware Attacks On Chrome Extensions? You’re Not The Only One.

20 Monday Jan 2014

Posted by Celia C. Elwell, RP in Chrome, Legal Technology

≈ Comments Off on Experienced Malware Attacks On Chrome Extensions? You’re Not The Only One.

Tags

Adware Vendors, BBC News Technology, Chrome, Chrome Extensions, Malware, Risk Assessment/Security & Hactivisim, Ron Amadeo, Spam

Adware Vendors Buy Chrome Extensions To Send Ad- And Malware-Filled Updates, by Ron Amadeo, Risk Assessment/Security & Hactivisim

http://tinyurl.com/qheon5v

AND

Chrome Extensions Targeted By Spam Firms, BBC News Technology

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-25808193

There is good news – Chrome’s extension policy will change in June 2014. Hopefully that will fix the problem. -CCE

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