GAY Thooie

Enterprise email is so fucking terrible I have no idea why EVERYONE doesn't cloud it.
Because CEO's are shortsighted and pompous. At my last job we tried to cloud and the CEO threw a fit because "it's not as secure" as an in-house server. :rolleyes:
 
Because CEO's are shortsighted and pompous. At my last job we tried to cloud and the CEO threw a fit because "it's not as secure" as an in-house server. :rolleyes:

There are still many industries where this is a valid issue.

For instance, anyone who has to deal with HIPAA
 
Lots of different compliance out there. But I'd be curious about that in addition to storage limits, etc.
When I left my last company, we were getting ADFS in place so that we could move to 365. Oh yeah, make sure you have ADFS first, which can be its own giant pain. However, managing enterprise email is cumbersome, expensive, and dumb. Moving it to the cloud is a no brainer IMO. I would assume that you can probably do most of the stuff you can do with Exchange now. And I'm sure they qualify for all the major regulations.
 
When I left my last company, we were getting ADFS in place so that we could move to 365. Oh yeah, make sure you have ADFS first, which can be its own giant pain. However, managing enterprise email is cumbersome, expensive, and dumb. Moving it to the cloud is a no brainer IMO. I would assume that you can probably do most of the stuff you can do with Exchange now. And I'm sure they qualify for all the major regulations.

@ $50k per HIPAA violation, I don't know of many large medical orgs that would trust a vendor with keeping their data safe.
 
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im not ok with my business stopping functioning and losing access to all my data and information when the internet goes down
 
@ $50k per HIPAA violation, I don't know of many large medical orgs that would trust a vendor with keeping their data safe.
I'd be willing to bet there are a ton of them already using the service. It's not like MS doesn't know what they are doing. BTW, you're being ancient again...
 
I'd be willing to bet there are a ton of them already using the service. It's not like MS doesn't know what they are doing. BTW, you're being ancient again...

No, I'm being an educated and experienced health care IT professional.
 
What's to prevent a company from putting "any fines resulting from HIPAA violations that are a result of using your service will be the responsibility of your company to pay" or some such in a contract?