Not only would I put some kind of AV on every possible platform, I would consider 
using different brands of AV on each type of platform (e.g. NAV on the desktops, 
Inoculate-It on the file servers, and Trend on Exchange).  This can improve protection 
when a new threat is going around, since any given vendor may be faster than another 
at issuing updated signatures.

-----Original Message-----
From: Lathrum Matt-P55173 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, April 10, 2002 1:10 PM
To: MS-Exchange Admin Issues
Subject: Is virus protection on the Exchange server necessary?


Our environment has Trend running on the firewall for anti-virus and content 
filtering.  We have NAV running on the desktops.  We are currently evaluating Antigen 
and SAVF (Symantec) to put on our E2K Exchange servers (including an E2K cluster on a 
Compaq SAN).  However, our Microsoft resident is suggesting to us that AV on the 
servers themselves is not necessary and will only introduce problems and instability 
(particularly Symantec's product).  He said that when a virus outbreak occurs that 
actually gets inside, a quick ExMerge on the server is just as effective as pushing 
out virus defs using the AV product.

With AV software on the firewall and on the desktops, what do people think about not 
putting AV on the Exchange servers themselves?

-- 
Matt Lathrum
General Dynamics Decision Systems        
             When cryptography is outlawed,
             bayl bhgynjf jvyy unir cevinpl.


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