Pretty neat..
AT&T is seeking to patent self-destructing email.
A U.S. patent application by AT&T that was made public today notes that once you send an email, you can't control what's done with it: it can be forwarded, printed, saved or copied.
"Conventional e-mail systems may also be inappropriate for sending confidential or proprietary information because these systems do not allow the sender of an e-mail message to control the lifespan of the e-mail message," the patent application notes. "E-mail messages may, therefore, languish in a recipient's e-mail 'in-box' or on an e-mail server computer for months or even years. Some e-mail systems will allow an e-mail recipient to specify that messages should be deleted after a certain amount of time. However, these systems do not allow the sender to specify a time for destruction of the sent e-mail message. Therefore, an e-mail sender cannot be certain that a sent e-mail message containing time sensitive information will ever be deleted."
AT&T says its new technology can create self-destructing e-mail messages that allows a user to specify a time for the destruction of a sent e-mail message and that will destroy all instances of the e-mail message when the specified time arrives. It also can restrict the number and type of things that may be done to a sent e-mail message, thereby restricting the ability of a recipient to replicate it.
"The e-mail message will be destroyed by the e-mail client application whether or not the message has been read," the patent application says. "Alternatively, if the e-mail message specifies that it should be deleted after it has been read, the e-mail client application will destroy the e-mail message once it has been opened and closed by the recipient. All instances of the e-mail message are deleted from the recipient's computer."
The inventors of the technology are three Atlantans, William A. Hartselle, Shannon M. Short and Vernon Meadows.
To read the patent application, click here.
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