Relevant Product: Signature Manager Exchange Edition
WARNING! The following product was discontinued on 1st April 2021 and is no longer available for purchase or support:
- Mail Disclaimers
For more information, please see the Discontinued Questions and Answers page.
WARNING! The following products were discontinued on 30 September 2022:
- Exclaimer Signature Manager Outlook Edition
- Exclaimer Signature Manager Exchange Edition
The end of Support for these products is 30th September 2024.
For more information, please see the Discontinued Questions and Answers page.
This article consists of the following sections:
What is an email disclaimer?
Why might the law require me to have one?
What are the different disclaiming laws?
What are my options?
Question: Do I need dedicated software that will add email disclaimers for me?
What is an email disclaimer?
In layman’s terms, an email disclaimer is a block of text that is added to an outgoing email to limit liability, often appearing at the bottom of an email as a separate section. The content often includes the company name, registered office address and company registration details which is a legal requirement for corporate emails in many countries.
Take a look at Email Disclaimer Templates and Examples.
Why might the law require me to have one?
There are many schools of thought as to whether or not email disclaimers are required by law. An organization will generally add an email disclaimer to:- Limit the sender’s liability for the content of a message; that is, an employee sending defamatory statements.
- Cover confidentiality breaches protecting exposure of confidential information such as private data.
- Highlight that an email does not form the basis of a legally binding contract.
- Protect against being liable for negligent advice on behalf of an employee.
- Warn recipients against the possibility of an email carrying a computer virus.
What are the different disclaiming laws?
Many advanced markets have regulations in place that require businesses to add disclaimers to their emails whether they want to or not. Some of these are sector-specific.It is also important to add disclaimers to internal emails as well - this should be different from external emails, as different issues can arise. There have been a number of lawsuits that have occurred due to internal circulation of offensive emails.
What are my options?
You can choose from various options, such as
Let users create their own signatures
Use another system to route emails
Let users create their signatures
Many email clients allow users to create pre-defined content for their email signature, which will also include a disclaimer. Once the users have created their signatures, no further action is carried out and they often are no longer monitored.
Users do eventually end up modifying or deleting their email signatures, whether deliberately or by accident. Even if you find a way to overcome this problem, they can still delete text straight out of their email message. This means they can change the disclaimer to the point where it no longer serves its purpose.Use another system to route emails
Some companies take responsibility for adding email disclaimers away from all users and set one up on a separate system. Some examples would be a firewall, an anti-virus or anti-spam system which include features to add text to some or all emails that pass through them. If all messages go through one of these systems, then it gives you straight email compliance.- Many of these systems only allow plain text to be entered, giving you no control over layout and you can’t have images or logos.
- There is unlikely to be any control over where the email disclaimer goes other than the top and bottom of an email.
- There is no way to prevent the system from adding the disclaimer again and again. After several replies in an email exchange, disclaimer text can very quickly build up so that it ends up turning into an email disclaimer exchange, dwarfing the actual message.
Add disclaimers via a server
With Microsoft Exchange 2007 and above, all disclaimers are added on the server with the Hub Transport role. This gives you greater flexibility as these servers handle all of your emails, internal and external.However, the disclaimer features that come with Exchange are very basic and often do not meet the needs of many organizations. It won’t let you have HTML signatures, create different signature templates for various sender and recipient groups or let you add images like logos as it will turn them into attachments.