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  • 9 years ago
What We Lose When the World Moves On From Email
But they also suggest what we’ll lose when, inevitably, the world does move on to something better
than email — an unmatched historical record of some of the most important stories in the world.
I said pretty much the same thing last year about the emails of John D. Podesta, Hillary Clinton’s campaign
chairman, whose inbox emptied across the internet after he clicked on a link he shouldn’t have.
Both Mr. Trump and Rob Goldstone, an entertainment publicist who had a relationship
with the Trump Organization, understood the sensitivity of their conversation.
What was most notable about the Podesta stash — not to mention earlier releases from the Democratic National Committee
and Mrs. Clinton’s own server — was the Clinton campaign’s apparent slavishness to email.
Though its political implications are yet unclear, the publication of an email chain in which Donald Trump Jr. arranged a June 2016 meeting with a lawyer peddling
the Russian government’s help for his father’s presidential campaign ought to inspire some pretty obvious tech advice: Step away from the inbox, stupid!
The last two decades, email’s high-water era, have thus been a bounty for anyone wishing to understand exactly what was happening
in the inner circles of powerful organizations — for journalists, historians and prosecutors of white-collar crime, among others.
Mr. Goldstone actually noted the sensitivity a couple of times in the email thread.
One of email’s best tricks is asynchronicity — you can send an email even if your recipient is away, unlike a phone call.

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