It wasn't designed to support parental control and supervision, but Google's new email delegation function is very helpful (emphases mine) ...
Google Apps update alerts: Email delegation now available for all Google Apps customers
.... Administrators must first enable mail delegation by checking the 'Mail Delegation' checkbox under 'Email Settings' in the administrator control panel.
To enter a delegate, users can select the 'Accounts' tab under 'Settings' in Gmail and click 'Add another account' to enter their delegate's email address.
Once the delegate is signed into their own own Gmail account, they can then access the other person's account from the account selection menu at the top of Gmail....
You can only add delegation accounts that are a part of the Google Apps domain, you can't add external Gmail accounts.
It takes a while for the "account selection" menu to appear. About fifteen minutes after I set up delegation on my son's account a small arrow appeared to the right of my bold email address on the top right of my Google Apps Gmail page.
In fact currently my son does not directly use Gmail, it's just an IMAP service for OS X Mail.app. Only I know his Gmail password. So this doesn't let me do anything I couldn't already do, but it's much easier to monitor his account.
Mail delegation was and is still limited to complete accounts, you cannot delegate just a folder/label as it is possible with Microsoft Exchange/Outlook. The usefulness of the feature remains therefore limited in a business environment.
ReplyDeleteBTW: I am glad that my parents were not able to monitor my mail usage … ;)
By the time email got to me, before the internet was public, I was well out of the house :-).
ReplyDeleteThere are some unusual circumstances in play at our home, I don't think email monitoring is worth it for most parental units.