Luis Hernán Otegui wrote:
> Anyway, the Faculty I work for tries to keep the e-mail system only
> for research purposes, and mostly students and (sadly) technicians
> tend to goof around with mail. Bandwidth isn't cheap here, so they
> decided to straightly cut those extensions. Remember, the customer is
> always right... 

If you'd just block out the extensions and I were a student in your faculty and 
wanted to send an MP3 or something, then I'd just goof a bit more and rename a 
.mp3 to a .txt, just because I can get around that. That's what I think (most) 
students do if they're clever enough.
Of course blocking extensions is cheap in CPU/mem resources but IMHO it's not 
the way to go. Inspecting the attachments checking for filetypes to block is 
more intensive but also much much harder to omit. Of course, you can still 
block these extensions... :-)


Rob

Reply via email to