>From the sys adminpoint of view: The only way to be sure is to educate your users.
* Don't open any attachment if you were not expecting one, * If its a zip or rar file, verify that the sender sent it, * If unsure ask a sysadmin for help Hey, maybe I should add an inline warning with the above info in for all internal users, if a zip or rar file should come in. You could put a nice notice, telephone number, and URL's for more info into it, in the chance that they might read it MIMEDefang does a great job, with or without SA hooks, but it can't do your job for you. I've had enough problems with "So, well.. I ran this zip file from such and such, yes it needed a password, but they sent that, and now my computer is running really slow... hey, why did you unplug my network cable?". Whats next? The .txt file that you have to rename to .exe, then double click it? -Paul Whittney On Mon, Mar 15, 2004 at 01:00:26PM -0500, Kevin A. McGrail wrote: > I am fairly 99% certain that you need WinRar to uncompress a RAR file in > Windows. > > Hopefully, this is a non-issue as anyone who is intelligent enough to know > how to uncompress a RAR file will not blindly follow the instructions for > the virus. > > KAM > > > Can windows even upzip an rar file? If so, how? > > _______________________________________________ > Visit http://www.mimedefang.org and http://www.canit.ca > MIMEDefang mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://lists.roaringpenguin.com/mailman/listinfo/mimedefang _______________________________________________ Visit http://www.mimedefang.org and http://www.canit.ca MIMEDefang mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://lists.roaringpenguin.com/mailman/listinfo/mimedefang

