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AVs that scan incoming e-mail

 
 
Box
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      1st Sep 2003
Which anti-virus programs are capable of scanning incoming e-mails (like
those being downloaded from POP3 boxes) for viruses/trojans? All I know,
according to what I've seen, is that F-Prot and F-Secure Anti Virus 2003
do not do this.

And of those which do, which also monitor the web pages being viewed in
browsers for viruses/trojans/worms that get auto-executed through any
of Microsoft's endless ActiveX security holes?

I've never understood how AV products can "intercept" what browsers and
e-mail clients are downloading. Do they function like packet sniffers,
simply watching data passing into your sockets on their way to said
clients? Or do they hook into the clients themselves at the "API level"?
(If the latter, does that mean most AV products won't be able to "scan"
web pages/e-mails when it comes to non-IE/Outlook web/mail clients like
Opera and Netscape?)

Sorry for asking questions that have probably been asked 1,000,000 times.

 
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Tell :-\), 2k3
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      1st Sep 2003

"Box" <(E-Mail Removed)> ha scritto nel messaggio
news:zFE4b.4479$(E-Mail Removed)...
> Which anti-virus programs are capable of scanning incoming e-mails (like
> those being downloaded from POP3 boxes) for viruses/trojans? All I know,
> according to what I've seen, is that F-Prot and F-Secure Anti Virus 2003
> do not do this.


Nod 32


 
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Acadia
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      1st Sep 2003
> All I know, according to what I've seen, is that F-Prot and F-Secure Anti
Virus 2003 do not do this.

ETrust EZ also does NOT scan incoming email. (Shame, because it is an
excellent AV otherwise, IMHO).

--
Have both a nice day and a happy life, Acadia.


 
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W.S.Blevins
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      1st Sep 2003
On Mon, 01 Sep 2003 09:52:31 GMT, Box <(E-Mail Removed)> posted
the following useless information:

>Which anti-virus programs are capable of scanning incoming e-mails (like
>those being downloaded from POP3 boxes) for viruses/trojans? All I know,
>according to what I've seen, is that F-Prot and F-Secure Anti Virus 2003
>do not do this.



Nod32 does.
 
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null@zilch.com
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      1st Sep 2003
On Mon, 01 Sep 2003 10:45:50 GMT, W.S.Blevins <(E-Mail Removed)>
wrote:

>On Mon, 01 Sep 2003 09:52:31 GMT, Box <(E-Mail Removed)> posted
>the following useless information:
>
>>Which anti-virus programs are capable of scanning incoming e-mails (like
>>those being downloaded from POP3 boxes) for viruses/trojans? All I know,
>>according to what I've seen, is that F-Prot and F-Secure Anti Virus 2003
>>do not do this.

>
>
>Nod32 does.


Use a sane email client and forget that sort of nonsense.


Art
http://www.epix.net/~artnpeg
 
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Frank Murphy
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      2nd Sep 2003
Kaspersky



On Mon, 01 Sep 2003 09:52:31 GMT, Box <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:

>Which anti-virus programs are capable of scanning incoming e-mails (like
>those being downloaded from POP3 boxes) for viruses/trojans? All I know,
>according to what I've seen, is that F-Prot and F-Secure Anti Virus 2003
>do not do this.
>
>And of those which do, which also monitor the web pages being viewed in
>browsers for viruses/trojans/worms that get auto-executed through any
>of Microsoft's endless ActiveX security holes?
>
>I've never understood how AV products can "intercept" what browsers and
>e-mail clients are downloading. Do they function like packet sniffers,
>simply watching data passing into your sockets on their way to said
>clients? Or do they hook into the clients themselves at the "API level"?
>(If the latter, does that mean most AV products won't be able to "scan"
>web pages/e-mails when it comes to non-IE/Outlook web/mail clients like
>Opera and Netscape?)
>
>Sorry for asking questions that have probably been asked 1,000,000 times.


 
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Mike Daniel
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      2nd Sep 2003
In article <%hF4b.121774$0v4.8786287@bgtnsc04-
news.ops.worldnet.att.net>, (E-Mail Removed) says...
> > All I know, according to what I've seen, is that F-Prot and F-Secure Anti

> Virus 2003 do not do this.
>
> ETrust EZ also does NOT scan incoming email. (Shame, because it is an
> excellent AV otherwise, IMHO).
>
>


True, but as soon as the virus tries to do anything, the realtime
scanner blocks it. I've been running EZ Antivirus since the free IPE
days and never had a virus get past it.

Mike

 
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Jari Lehtonen
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      2nd Sep 2003
On Mon, 01 Sep 2003 09:52:31 GMT, Box <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:

>Which anti-virus programs are capable of scanning incoming e-mails (like
>those being downloaded from POP3 boxes) for viruses/trojans? All I know,
>according to what I've seen, is that F-Prot and F-Secure Anti Virus 2003
>do not do this.


F-secure Anti-Virus clien v. 5.50 does.
http://www.europe.f-secure.com/anti-...ate/avcs.shtml

jari
 
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Edwin Davidson
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      11th Sep 2003
> True, but as soon as the virus tries to do anything, the realtime
> scanner blocks it. I've been running EZ Antivirus since the free IPE
> days and never had a virus get past it.
>
> Mike


For most of the viruses, this is true. However;

I've seen them get past eTrust InoculateIt 6.0. If they are the type
that run in the preview pane, InoculateIT detects it and blocks it on
the temp dir, but it's too late - the virus has already ran and is in
memory at this point.

Same thing with the FriendCard trojan. Sure, Inoculan detected it and
stoped it in the IE cache, but at that point the software was in
memory and was already running and sent out the e-mails.

A little testing, and 7.0 seems to do a better job. But I didn't do
enough testing to make a good determination.

We have other antivirus software running for HTTP/FTP/SMTP scanning -
but were talking a lot more $ than what you'd want to pay for a single
station.

PC-Cillen does e-mail & web and Norton does HTTP/POP3/SMTP/IM. Easy
way to state how they work is transparent proxy. New services that
you'll have to allow through ZoneAlarm. Although you get the added
SMTP scanning, you now have a SMTP/HTTP/Pop3 proxy running on your
machine that is approved internet access in ZoneAlarm. If a new worm
gets on your PC that there are no patterns for, you normally get
notified if it tries to access the net. What happens in this proxy
setup? Does it just go on out because the transparent proxy is
approved in ZA?
 
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