Silent virus list, was: Palyh-A virus
Kevin Spicer
kevins at BMRB.CO.UK
Mon May 19 21:37:55 IST 2003
In my (corporate) environment the most important thing is that we (the
support team) get notified when a virus email originates from within our
ip block. Now if there was a way to alter the subject of the postmaster
virus notification when it refers to a local IP that would be great. I
appreciate this may be complicated by the fact that postmaster
notifications can contain information about a whole batch of messages
(although personally I rarely see more than one in a block).
On Mon, 2003-05-19 at 21:23, Remco Barendse wrote:
If you are a hoster you will know by the ip block the virus came from?
On Mon, 19 May 2003, Richard Siddall wrote:
> Julian Field wrote:
> > Overall, I think we all need to move to a setup where we do sender
warnings
> > for people on our site/domain and don't bother informing the rest of
the
> > world at all.
>
> If you're in the web hosting business, is there a difference? How do
> you determine whether the virus has come from a customer, a customer's
> client, or just a visitor to a customer's web site?
>
> Richard.
>
BMRB International
http://www.bmrb.co.uk
+44 (0)20 8566 5000
_________________________________________________________________
This message (and any attachment) is intended only for the
recipient and may contain confidential and/or privileged
material. If you have received this in error, please contact the
sender and delete this message immediately. Disclosure, copying
or other action taken in respect of this email or in
reliance on it is prohibited. BMRB International Limited
accepts no liability in relation to any personal emails, or
content of any email which does not directly relate to our
business.
More information about the MailScanner
mailing list