The flood of e-mails began when “Babette” accidentally replied to “all” on the Bundestag e-mail list with a short answer to a colleague: “Please bring me a copy of the new directory.”
Their exchange quickly multiplied when hundreds of colleagues responded with comments ranging from please “remove my name from your list” to “I’d like to take this opportunity to say hello to my mother.”
It was a rare moment of light-hearted confusion in a country with a reputation for doing things with precision.
Many Germans working in the Parliament remained uncharacteristically relaxed. One member of Parliament for the Greens party, Volker Beck, said: “One mistaken click and the parliament’s e-mail system is turned into a new social network.”
One anonymous staffer in the usually anonymous Parliament building wrote: “I think this is great. We should do this once a month. It’ll help us grow together.”
A spokeswomen of the Bundestag confirmed that there had been a flood of e-mails in response to the errant e-mail and that it was possible, as German media reported, that e-mails in the parliament were delayed by up to a half an hour due to the high volume.
Errant e-mail cripples German Parliament
Publication Date:
Thu, 2012-01-26 22:21
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