> How does Pegasus Mail for Windows handle attached executable 
> files?  Does it probably block them so they can't be run?  
> I'm asking because attached executable files have been 
> historically the number one method for transmitting email 
> worms from one user to the next.

Haven't upgraded Pegasus for a year or two, but the last version I installed
was more DIY than that. The option was basically to select file-types on
which you could choose to be warned if the attachment was of that type. I've
always liked Pegasus for its DIY capabilities, but I'm not sure I see the
point of that except to roll out to corporate users, which I never saw as
its market. But it may have changed a lot.

-- 
David Harley 
Security Author/Editor/Consultant, Antivirus Researcher
Small Blue-Green World
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
New botnet book: http://www.syngress.com/catalog/?pid=4270
Security Bibliography:
http://www.smallblue-greenworld.co.uk/pages/bibliography.html
Articles: http://watersidesyndication.com/inbusiness/;
http://dharley.wordpress.com/
 

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