Of course. A company e-mail system is installed for the benefit of the company. There should be no private e-mails in it. Sending private e-mails over a company system is tantamount to theft.
Do you believe that Apple Inc.Functions as an open system?
Keep your antivirus software up to date and never open an email attachment unless you absolutely trust the person or company that sent it.
They aren't supposed to, but if they have your password they can. And just so you know, if it is company e-mail, the company can legally read your e-mail, so be careful what you have in there..
If you download an unknown email attachment and open it on your computer, it could install a virus on your system and you would have a problem.
A company computer should have the privileges to open a URL. It should be there to open a webpage on the system.
Facebook automatically generates email and send you many messages. Especially if you never open them, your email system might assuem they are coming from a source that did not have your permission to send you email. You can allow the Facebook messages into your inbox by chaning the settings of your email account.
Open Office will happily read Word perfect documents.
To do this you would normally just connect to whatever page your email hosting company is. From there they should have a "Log In" button or a "Sign Up" button on the front page. If you are accessing mail from your own personal site you can do this by putting "mail." before the domain (without quotes). So for example: mail.wikianswers.com
If you can't find yours, or haven't gotten one, contact any Social security branch or tax office.
When you receive an email from a company you deal with, it's often best to avoid clicking on the links in the email unless you are absolutely sure that the email came from your company. It's best to just open a browser and go directly to your bank's web site that you have safely used before.
When you receive an email from a company you deal with, it's often best to avoid clicking on the links in the email unless you are absolutely sure that the email came from your company. It's best to just open a browser and go directly to your bank's web site that you have safely used before.
No, not only open email but also download the attachment.