As with any test or check done you as the administrator have to weigh the
risk between deliverability vs security. In my personal opinion if there is
a specific vulnerability that is causing too many false positives (I assume
you mean OLBLANKFOLDING which prevents Outlook displaying attachments that
were hidden by bad encoding) disabling it would be low risk.

David Barker
Mail's Best Friend

Email     : [email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]> 
Web      : www.mailsbestfriend.com <http://www.mailsbestfriend.com/> 
Office    : 866.919.2075




 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Heimir Eidskrem
Sent: Friday, September 18, 2015 10:12 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [MBF] Outlook vulnerability

 

Hello,

Is the vulnerabilities still needed to be blocked?

We have seen a few false positive lately.

 

 

#ALLOWVULNERABILITY               OBJECTDATA

#ALLOWVULNERABILITY               OLCR

#ALLOWVULNERABILITY               OLSPACEGAP

ALLOWVULNERABILITY                  OLBLANKFOLDING

#ALLOWVULNERABILITY               OLMIMEHEADER

#ALLOWVULNERABILITY               OLMIMESEGMIMEPRE

#ALLOWVULNERABILITY               MIMESEGMIMEPOST

#ALLOWVULNERABILITY               OLLONGBOUNDARY

#ALLOWVULNERABILITY               OLBOUNDARYSPACEGAP

#ALLOWVULNERABILITY               OLLONGFILENAME

#ALLOWVULNERABILITY               NONSTANDARDHDR

 

 

Cordially,

Heimir Eidskrem

i360 Consulting
11152 Westheimer
Suite 147
Houston, TX 77042
Ph:  713-981-4900
[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 
www.i360.net <http://www.i360.net/> 
www.smart-it-services.com

Houston's Leading Internet Consulting Company

 

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