Stealthy Carbon Fiber Stiletto Boat Reaches 60 Knots

[Thanks, Laz]


Here's another tale of e-mail messages gone awry that ought to teach you to be careful the next time you hit the "send" button.
A lawyer for pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly mistakenly sent an important e-mail to a New York Times reporter whose name is similar to that of another lawyer working with her on a billion dollar settlement between the drug company and the U.S. government.
Eli Lilly is looking to settle accusations that it hadn't properly marketed the drug Zyprexa, which was developed to treat schizophrenia. If the settlement goes through -- the Times article notes -- the fine would be the "largest ever paid by a drug company for breaking the federal laws that govern how drug makers can promote their medicines." The company had wanted to keep the negotiations quiet.
The New York Times reporter, Alex Berenson, started making calls to the company for comments after getting the e-mail that had been intended for lawyer Brad Berenson, who works at white shoe firm Sidley Austin. The New York Times ended up putting the story on the front page of the newspaper. Eli Lilly executives thought at first the government had leaked the story, but soon found out it was from the Philadelphia-based firm Pepper Hamilton, which is part of its outside legal team.
There's more than one way to make a big e-mail mistake like this. Sometimes a person puts in the wrong address. Sometimes a person sends the wrong message to everyone. And sometimes you've got the right email address but you're forwarding all the wrong information!
The lesson here? Pay attention to the who, what and where of your email. It's a great convenience and good tool for business -- but dangerous in the hands of the sloppy.
From NetworkWorld.com and Portfolio.com.
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