Title: Message
Ahh,
SPAM. I love it. I'll take yours!
Seriously, the only way to reduce the impact of spam on your network is
to never accept it. Content filtering works to an extent, but that requires you
to accept the mail, therefore taking the resource hit on your network. Not to
Depending on their budgets, here are a few
solutions:
If they can not spend a lot, go with open relay
filter. Starting cost is $25 for the stardard version and $99.00 for the
enterprise version. We use this with some of our smaller
clients.
http://www.vamsoft.com/orf/
If you want to add
of a sudden I started loosing
email. The program was picking apart one of our clients
names.
-Original Message-From: Rob Freeman
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, June 09, 2003 7:46
AMTo: [EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: Re:
[ActiveDir] Exchange, and SPAM filters or blacklist
of
research for a better more encompassing tool.
-Original Message-
From: Bryan Schlegel
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, June 09, 2003 7:54
AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [ActiveDir] Exchange,
and SPAM filters or blacklist or...
Although this thread has
nothing to do
: Monday, June 09, 2003 8:11
AMTo: [EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: RE:
[ActiveDir] Exchange, and SPAM filters or blacklist or...
The biggest issue
with Nortons SAVF is the fact
that Exchange 2K handles APIs on every message differently so you could end up
with slip throughs as
far
en I started loosing
email. The program was picking apart one of our clients
names.
-Original Message-From: Rob Freeman
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Monday, June 09, 2003 7:46
AMTo: [EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: Re:
[ActiveDir] Exchange, and SPAM
Messagelabs--Sent from my BlackBerry Wireless Handheld - Original Message - From: ActiveDir-owner Sent: 06/07/2003 01:25 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: [ActiveDir] Exchange, and SPAM filters or blacklist or...
Does anyone have recommendations for a Spam filter