by erwin » Mar 26 04 2:22 pm
Hi Vince
To clarify my earlier post for you:
VPN typically works like this:
Office 1 creates a special secure tunnel across the public highway of the Internet to Office 2, which only these two Offices can use.
Through the VPN tunnel the Office 1 network will be able to access machines/shares/files etc in Office2 as if it was on the same LAN
VPN traffic( file transfers,data etc) is only encrypted while in the VPN tunnel. Files created moved and saved during a VPN connection are treated as normal (with NO special encryption lingering as a result of being moved across/or involved in a VPN.)
E.G. Office 1 and Office 2 have a VPN tunnel/connection between them.
The pc at Office 1 has a document saved on its hard drive
As long as there is no permissions/encryption on the file that could be SET BY THE OPERATING SYSTEM, the file will be able to be read by other machines, regardless of whether the computer participates in a VPN or not. So you could save it to a CD or floppy and open it on another machine.
When participating in the VPN, the PC at office 2 will see the document on the hard drive at Office 1 PC.
The office 2 pc grabs a copy of the file through the VPN tunnel.
(As the document travels down the tunnel, this is the only place where the document is temporarily subject to encryption).
Once it leaves the tunnel and is saved to the hard drive of the pc in Office 2 it is no longer encrypted, or will suffer any after effects of the encryption that happened in the VPN tunnel.
So in the case you described there should be no reason why files created in a VPN and then later emailed to some address should have difficulty being opened unless some form of file encryption/or access rights has been set on the file by some other means. i.e. Operating system/application feature.
(The VPN will have NO affect on this)
Hope this gives some clear meaning to your problem.
Regards
Erwin