The latest victim of this classic digital blunder is a female receptionist at oil company Integrated Subsea Services in Aberdeen, Scotland. The woman sent what she thought was a simple email to her co-workers to tell them the sandwich van had arrived. Unfortunately, she inadvertently forwarded them all an X-rated conversation she'd had with her fiancé.
The racy exchange included tidbits like "I loved our session last night.....it was ace!" and "Hee hee, sexy f**ker, I fancy you xxxx."
Somehow the sexy emails were put online and quickly went viral on Twitter under the hashtag #sandwichvan, launching the unfortunate receptionist to unexpected stardom.
A spokesperson for the company said the couple had chosen to resign from their jobs, even though no disciplinary action had been taken against them, reports The Daily Mail. A BBC reporter confirmed Friday that the couple had resigned, Gawker points out.
Let this be a lesson to all white-collar office employees: Don't use your work email for personal correspondence.
The Huffington Post
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By Hunter Stuart
Posted: 01/25/2013 7:30 pm EST
The latest victim of this classic digital blunder is a female receptionist at oil company Integrated Subsea Services in Aberdeen, Scotland. The woman sent what she thought was a simple email to her co-workers to tell them the sandwich van had arrived. Unfortunately, she inadvertently forwarded them all an X-rated conversation she'd had with her fiancé.
The racy exchange included tidbits like "I loved our session last night.....it was ace!" and "Hee hee, sexy f**ker, I fancy you xxxx."
Somehow the sexy emails were put online and quickly went viral on Twitter under the hashtag #sandwichvan, launching the unfortunate receptionist to unexpected stardom.
A spokesperson for the company said the couple had chosen to resign from their jobs, even though no disciplinary action had been taken against them, reports The Daily Mail. A BBC reporter confirmed Friday that the couple had resigned, Gawker points out.
Let this be a lesson to all white-collar office employees: Don't use your work email for personal correspondence.
HuffingtonPost