At 16:25 12-06-2001, Brent Scott wrote:
Yep, for sure, you should use NAV For Exchange 2.51 ;-) ... Pretty good 
product ... you can block (delete) attachments, even if they are not 
infected .. ;)

Take Care!
Marco Bicca

>Would be better off to get Anti-Gen for Exchange Server, the filtering
>is quite easy plus it does virus scanning as well. No having to hack the
>registry. It also uses virus definitions from all the major anti-virus
>software vendors assuring that at least one of them will stop what's out
>there.
>
>Cheers,
>Brent
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Calhoun, Heath [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>Sent: Wednesday, December 05, 2001 3:43 PM
>To: g p; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: RE: Exchange 2000
>
>
>I'd suggest getting Norton for Microsoft Exchange Server.
>Once installed, through the registery you can block the file types.
>
>Heath Calhoun
>
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: g p [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>Sent: Tuesday, December 04, 2001 3:50 PM
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: Exchange 2000
>
>
>I'm new to exchange 2000 and I know this is probably a easy question for
>everyone but I was wondering how to block certain attachments(filenames)
>in
>exchange 2000.  I would like to have it such that files are stripped out
>of
>emails before it reaches endusers.  Can you help?
>
>Thanks, GP
>--

___
Marco Bicca     |       Security Engineer     |  [EMAIL PROTECTED] | 
55 11 9963-4819
LICQ: 3198441 | Yahoo: TwilightDrummer | MSNM: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

"Remember: security is not a solution; it is a way of life"
  "The box said 'Windows NT or better', so I installed linux..........."

PGP: http://www.it-cowboyz.com/pgp/mbicca.asc


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