JetBlack69
Diamond Member
- Sep 16, 2001
- 4,580
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Originally posted by: Anubis
fine here, i havent gotten any of these new ones, I :heart: routers and firewalls
Originally posted by: Jzero
Originally posted by: Anubis
fine here, i havent gotten any of these new ones, I :heart: routers and firewalls
Routers and Firewalls don't do much for e-mail viruses...![]()
Originally posted by: MogulMonster
Originally posted by: Jzero
Originally posted by: Anubis
fine here, i havent gotten any of these new ones, I :heart: routers and firewalls
Routers and Firewalls don't do much for e-mail viruses...![]()
Symantec didn't do anything for this on my home machines, but my Netscreen IDP box took care of all of it at work. Another tragedy averted for the time being. :thumbsup:
The problem with rules based filters is they also filter out legitimate attachments as well. As somebody that does support for a multitude of customers, having to send updates to those with email filters is annoying as hell.Originally posted by: Jzero
It's not really applicable for home users, but any company with a mail server should be using a software tool to delete common virus extensions like .scr, .pif, .exe, .com, .bat, etc, before they get to the user, regardless of if they match a virus definition. It also should kill password-protected zip files on sight.
I've been running one of these for about 2 years now (Sybari's Antigen) and it has all but silenced any virus activity (at least from e-mails).
Originally posted by: KnightBreed
The problem with rules based filters is they also filter out legitimate attachments as well. As somebody that does support for a multitude of customers, having to send updates to those with email filters is annoying as hell.Originally posted by: Jzero
It's not really applicable for home users, but any company with a mail server should be using a software tool to delete common virus extensions like .scr, .pif, .exe, .com, .bat, etc, before they get to the user, regardless of if they match a virus definition. It also should kill password-protected zip files on sight.
I've been running one of these for about 2 years now (Sybari's Antigen) and it has all but silenced any virus activity (at least from e-mails).
Action taken on message:
The attachment Fish.scr matched file blocking settings. ScanMail took the action: Deleted.
seen several variations of this one today.Action taken on message:
The attachment Dog.cpl matched file blocking settings. ScanMail took the action: Deleted.
Originally posted by: Jzero
Originally posted by: Anubis
fine here, i havent gotten any of these new ones, I :heart: routers and firewalls
Routers and Firewalls don't do much for e-mail viruses...![]()
Originally posted by: azazyel
I have started a collection. So far I have received 10 since the 6th. I know not all are the same thing but it is getting annoying.
OMGWTFBBQ <--First time this actually worksOriginally posted by: Doggiedog"My boss sent it to me. I normally don't open anything executable but it was a zip file I thought had pictures of his bbq this weekend since it said pics."
Originally posted by: Ogg
Yes.
Also variants include dog, fish, etc...........
This isnt a joke just the latest email virus to arrive by attachment. Reported today and not patched yet. Currently attacking our mail system![]()
Originally posted by: Jzero
Originally posted by: spidey07
Originally posted by: Rilescat
so how does it contain its own SMTP service? I would think that would take a large attachment.
nope, simple SMTP is very simple and very small.
Yep. And viruses have been doing this for quite some time.
I still can't figure out why any corporate entity is still not using a RULE-BASED FILTER! Get with the program, IT peeps!
I don't even give these small-time viruses a second thought anymore.
