If you have the misfortune of dealing with microsoft's products there is OWA (outlook web accexss) it does work well, and a 2 year old could set it up, but making it as secure as the other products out there requires some registry editing.
//John -----Original Message----- From: Ben Corman [mailto:ben.corman@;jefferson.edu] Sent: Friday, October 18, 2002 12:32 PM To: 'Nick Warr'; 'Link, Jennifer'; [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: Web Mail Vulnerabilities Check out: http://sourceforge.net/projects/rhems -Ben -----Original Message----- From: Nick Warr [mailto:nick@;mobilia.it] Sent: Friday, October 18, 2002 4:27 AM To: Link, Jennifer; [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: Web Mail Vulnerabilities We use a combination of wu-imap http://www.washington.edu/imap/ which had a scurity problem, but the latest version is secure (at least I haven't seen any new problems for it) there is also CYRUS http://asg.web.cmu.edu/cyrus/ which is a nicely scalable IMAP server and IMP webmail client http://www.horde.org/imp/ They stay on top of their security issues, and is quite easy to run over ssl. Wu-IMAP and IMP work quite well for us. Give them a look. Nick ----- Original Message ----- From: "Link, Jennifer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Tuesday, October 15, 2002 10:01 PM Subject: Web Mail Vulnerabilities > We are looking at provided mail access via internet connection (home, > internet cafe, library etc.) and I'm trying to research what vulnerabilities > exist for such access. Any websites, books or personal experience you could > provide would be VERY VERY helpful. I'm just getting started so all > tid-bits are welcome!! > > Jennifer M. Link > Phone: 703-602-8384 > Fax: 703-602-7854 > email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]