![]() Here is a cleaned up version of relevant lines: Looking into MSGTRK logs, I found out that problem is with group expansion ( distribution list expanded'): Exchange resolves to all members except from poorguy, like he doesn’t exist. I've tried to delete, re-create a new group adding poorguy as the only member, nothing happens (messages just get dropped with no recipient, no NDR) Nothing appears to be different from other users, except from an additional x500 address that comes from a previous migration. There are no particular policies/restrictions for poorguy. He can send and receive all messages directly from/to his mailbox with no issues. Poorguy has SMTP: and SMTP: in proxyAddresses attribute. I created a new group “test” with address added some members, but one of them (and only that one, let’s call him “ poorguy”) is not receiving emails.Īll groups/distribution lists work correctly, for all other mail recipients, except for poorguy. The authoritative record of NPR’s programming is the audio record.Hello all, I’m having a really weird problem with a distribution group in our Exchange 2016 (CU 10 build 1531.3). This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. NPR transcripts are created on a rush deadline by an NPR contractor. Visit our website terms of use and permissions pages at for further information. For NPR News, I'm Rebecca Sheir in Washington.Ĭopyright © 2015 NPR. After texting his friend that comment about the ramen, Shuo spent the next handful of texts apologizing. Having those moments where you are confronted with something that you don't feel proud of can be healthy in small doses. SONG: But I think a better exercise might be to just force yourself to think twice before hitting send. SHEIR: Shuo Song, our ramen-loving text regretter, agrees, not that he doesn't think an app like On Second Thought could be helpful. And when mom puts it on the refrigerator, it's real. ![]() SHEIR: That means resisting the urge to over-share, which she believes more and more of us are falling victim to.ĭRUIN: It's just like being a kid and knowing that I drew this, but it's really not real until I put it on the refrigerator. SHEIR: One way is by thinking more carefully about what we put out there and how quickly we do it.ĭRUIN: We have tools that let us instantly send things, tell things, we never could in the past. She worries we'll become too reliant on apps like On Second Thought.ĭRUIN: Instead of stopping people from doing the wrong thing, how can we help people learn to communicate in more appropriate ways? SHEIR: That's Allison Druin of the University of Maryland's College of Information Studies. But with On Second Thought, your message never even leaves your phone, which may sound great, but. Strings creators claim once you delete a text, it's truly gone, not stored on a cloud server somewhere. That's different from apps like TigerText or Strings, where you can erase a message once it goes out. He uses an app called On Second Thought, which gives you up to 60 seconds to un-send a message. SHEIR: But here's the thing - Antoine was able to take his text back. SHEIR: Speaking of moms, here's what happened to Antoine Lovelace, in Atlanta, Ga.ĪNTOINE LOVELACE: I was talking about my mother in a text message and actually sent the text message to my mom. Is my mom going to think that I'm flipping her off? Like, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. ODAR: Almost immediately, like, after I hit send I thought, oh, no. SHEIR: She texted her mom the picture along with the words here's a bird of my own. LIZ ODAR: I walked to my front door, and I flipped off the snow and the cold air, and took a picture of it. So when her mom texted from Florida, with a photo of seagulls flocking on a sunny sandy beach, Liz snapped. She lives in Arlington, Va., where the winter has been particularly brutal. ![]() And that was definitely a text that I would like back. I had a great bowl of ramen at this restaurant. SHUO SONG: And then the next day she texts me and she says, oh, hey, how was your night? And without even thinking, I said, oh, hey it was great. He was exhausted when he got to town, so he canceled. REBECCA SHEIR, BYLINE: Shuo Song was visiting Chicago for one night for work and had plans to meet up with a friend. But as Rebecca Sheir of member station WAMU reports, the most effective tool in warding off text regret might be ourselves. A number of smartphone apps are helping us cover our tracks. Americans send more than 6 billion texts every day, so it's no wonder that incidents of text regret are on the rise. It's happened to the best of us - we type out a text, hit send, and then immediately wish we hadn't.
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