Hello Chris,
 
These are some good comments, as it pertains to running a mail server behind a gateway and trying to bring DOS, email validating,  Tarpitting and other security/anti-hammering capabilities to the perimeter of your network.  These are areas we are looking at for 2006.
 
Regarding the errors you are experiencing, there's a good chance there is an IIS configuration issue.  A good place to check are the Release Notes which contain instructions on configuring folders and IIS. http://support.ipswitch.com/kb/IM-20051123-DM03.htm#InstallUpgrade  After checking there, the next step would probably be to contact Technical Support or you can contact me directly.
 
Also, the new web messaging templates work on Firefox Mac and we are in the process of validating on Safari (which is our preferred Mac browser but the same code that works fine on IE/FF/Moz on Win and FF on Mac does not behave as nicely on Safari).

Bye for now,
 
kg
-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]On Behalf Of Christopher Jones
Sent: Thursday, December 01, 2005 11:03 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: Re[4]: [IMail Forum] IMAIL / OPENLDAP and allow bind_v2

I guess this all brings me to my next question...and no doubt I am going to get abused for this.

 

If most people out there do have some sort of filtering in between the internet and their Imail server, then things like throttling the number of smtp connections when there is a dictionary attack are rendered useless, because you don’t want to be dropping connections from the gateway server. Things like Brightmail have the ability to throttle the connections for you, but it can’t use that feature with Imail as they can’t talk to each other for Brightmail’s needs.

 

So...it kind of annoys me personally when these features are being added and touted as great new benefits, but the development wasn’t done to have Webmail work on a Mac...which is something that should definitely have been done.

 

I installed Imail 2006 on my test server last night, and even from my own laptop (running XP SP2) the Webmail is atrocious. I can’t display the user preferences when I log into the http://server/IClient and on almost every page IE displays that there are errors on the page. I guess that is where my annoyance comes from...that these new features have been added but the existing working of the system seems to have suffered as a result.

 

I know it’s only the first release, but if the existing features doesn’t work first go, it doesn’t fill you with too much confidence.

 

Chris

 

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Sanford Whiteman
Sent: Friday, 2 December 2005 12:18 PM
To: Christopher Jones
Subject: Re[4]: [IMail Forum] IMAIL / OPENLDAP and allow bind_v2

 

> I agree that it's better to have those options than not at all...and

> as  you  suggest, I definitely don't use them. But what I am opposed

> to  is  allowing  email  from  the  internet directly in through the

> firewall  to  an  server  that is in your internal corporate network

> that  is  running  Imail without doing any scanning on the emails at

> all before they enter your network.

 

But there's no reason to assume that the IMail MX is not segregated in

a  DMZ. Though my guess is that, in most IMail deployments, the latter

practice isn't followed, but the two are unrelated.

 

> That's  what  I  am  trying  to  get  at...that  I  personally can't

> understand  why  people  would  want  to  allow  unfiltered  content

> directly into their internal network.

 

It's  "unfiltered"  in  the  sense that if there's a way of exploiting

SMTPD, and the SMTPD is also a mailbox server, then your mailboxes are

owned  automatically.  But if you own the SMTPD, it's trivial to sniff

the  traffic  on the way to the mailbox server, so you're up the creek

no matter what.

 

It's  a  similar  issue to allowing access to a DMZ-based reverse HTTP

proxy that might have a vulnerability. Putting it in a DMZ isn't going

to  do  much  good.  If one port needs to be user-facing, that port is

vulnerable,  and  that  server  has  readily  decryptable data passing

through it, the rest is history.

 

> Imail 2006 is only brand new....and I don't understand how any of us

> can  be sure that there are no possible flaws that could allow Imail

> to be manipulated into allowing access to your network.

 

Well,  I'm  not  running IMail 8.2x yet in production. :) I think that

the SMTPD can be assumed to be unchanged from 8.2x. It hasn't been out

for  too  long,  but  it's  not yesterday, either. IMail vets may take

chances  on  it  because  the performance is that much better than the

previous version. Newbies will roll it out because they have no reason

to  think  that  a  major-label product is vulnerable. Whether this is

wise will take a while to shake out.

 

> I'm  sorry  if  my  last message sounded rude and harsh...but from a

> security  stand-point,  Network  Security  101  states you should be

> using  a  DMZ  to  filter  all  traffic  before letting it into your

> network. That's what I was getting at.

 

True enough, but compared to SMTP32 from prior to 8.2x, the new one is

evidently more resilient. And if you were getting _accidentally_ DoSed

before just because you had too many connections, that's going to make

you  more  likely  to  plug  in the more scaleable version of the same

product,  despite  the  possibility  of undiscovered issues that might

impact more than just stability.

 

--Sandy

 

 

------------------------------------

Sanford Whiteman, Chief Technologist

Broadleaf Systems, a division of

Cypress Integrated Systems, Inc.

e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

SpamAssassin plugs into Declude!

  http://www.imprimia.com/products/software/freeutils/SPAMC32/download/release/

 

Defuse Dictionary Attacks: Turn Exchange or IMail mailboxes into IMail Aliases!

  http://www.imprimia.com/products/software/freeutils/exchange2aliases/download/release/

  http://www.imprimia.com/products/software/freeutils/ldap2aliases/download/release/

 

 

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