Hi Dan,
I agree but it is exceedingly difficult to get clients to follow such
instructions.
Having said that I am interested in adding a small sed script to simply
modify the http:// link to httDELETETHISp:// in all links. This will effectively
stop any page being called by any browser. It is also reasonably obvious that
removing the DELTETHIS will allow the page to execute.
Do you know where it would be best to insert the one line sed script?
TIA
best wishes
Tony White
On 28/01/2015 02:44, Dan McAllister wrote:
Tony:
There are options in simcontrol to disallow certain extensions in attachments (by default, they're .mp3, .src, .bat, and
.pif) and by adding more (say, .exe?) you can block those attachments completely... however there is nothing you can do
in the /server /(or in the message) that will tell (or force) the email client NOT to run an attachment. That is totally
the purview of the client software. (THIS IS WHY I tell my users to NEVER use the preview pane!)
In the words of Comedian Ron White: *You've all kinds of plastic surgery
options that can fix all kinds of ugly...
but you can't fix stupid.*
By which I mean that you cannot possibly engineer enough safeguards to prevent
users from doing stupid things.
Afraid that's the best advise I've got on this one :)
Dan McAllister
IT4SOHO
On 1/26/2015 10:46 PM, Tony White wrote:
Hi folks,
Has anyone any idea how to safely change links in emails to force them to not
autorun?
A client recently had an email that had a link to ransomware which encrypted
not only
the users local drive but the mapped drives as well.
Luckily we had a backup from the prior night so not too big a loss. It would
have been
better to not have the link autorun in the first place.
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