How to block all incoming email in O.E.?

Started by Marie (Zionkowski) Gozikowski, March 23, 2011, 04:40:57 PM

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Marie (Zionkowski) Gozikowski

Hi there,

We have Outlook Express (no exchange server).  The boss wants
employees to have the ability to send outgoing email, but only
wants me to have incoming mail so I can monitor everything before
someone opens something with a potential virus.

Then I can forward the email directly to them, once I have viewed it.
So, they would only be able to receive email from ME.

Any easy way to set this up?  I would just delete the settings in their
incoming mail server, but then they wouldn't get anything from me
either...

Any ideas?

Thanks!
Marie (Zionkowski) Gozikowski
Iddings Insurance Agency
Wyalusing, PA
WinTAM 11.1    SBS 2003 
8 users

Hans Manhave

Yes, why don't you print it out.  Unless you cough on it etc, no virus attached!

Fantasy is more important than knowledge, because knowledge has its boundaries - Albert Einstein

Mark

LOL @ Hans.  This is a new one to me, Marie.  Sounds like a lot of unnecessary work for everyone.
Mark Piontek, MBA
Director of Information Systems
BS in Information Systems Security

Mark

Ok, maybe a real answer, maybe not.  You could set up a simple internal mail server and configure everyone to receive email from that.  Then on your Old English (OE ;)) you could have both the internal account and external account.  when forwarding, just make sure you are sending from the Internal account.
Mark Piontek, MBA
Director of Information Systems
BS in Information Systems Security

Kevin Crow

It would be a lot more effective and economical to run your email though AppRiver (www.appriver.com). They'll scan it for spam and viruses for a very small fee ($10-15 per month in your case, I'd expect).
Kevin Crow
Kapnick Insurance Group
@kevincrow1 on Twitter
www.linkedin.com/pub/kevin-crow/8/8b6/4bb/

Hans Manhave

Exactly, Appriver.  They have a minimum fee of $45 or $50 per month, I think.  We have been happy for many years using them.  Changed a couple years ago to their hosted Exchange.

Anyway, Marie, your boss will have to give up a bucks to gain efficiency.  (Do you live in Bucks County?).  Get a real e-mail system, use Appriver, get a real firewall with the services enabled (Sonicwall TZ210 or similar) and you won't have all these problems.  Everyone can be productive and the boss can read the log files and enjoy the material that has been filtered.

Really, it is worth the money.  I am Dutch, I don't spend money easily.  The $1000-$1500 that may have to be spend is well worth it.  More than any advertising that is to be done this year etc.  Ok, enough of my opinion.  Please don't unfriend me on FB.  :)
Fantasy is more important than knowledge, because knowledge has its boundaries - Albert Einstein

Bob


Mark

Quote from: Kevin Crow on March 23, 2011, 04:45:29 PM
It would be a lot more effective and economical to run your email though AppRiver (www.appriver.com). They'll scan it for spam and viruses for a very small fee ($10-15 per month in your case, I'd expect).


I couldn't agree with this more.  Depending on what you are paying for email right now, you might even consider something like Google Apps or another hosted solution that INCLUDES spam filtering.

Lastly and by far most importantly, it is all about education, education, education.  Educating end uses is a MUST in today's Internet environment and that cannot be stressed enough.
Mark Piontek, MBA
Director of Information Systems
BS in Information Systems Security

Kevin Crow

I didn't know about the minimum fee (we wouldn't qualify) but still worth it.
Kevin Crow
Kapnick Insurance Group
@kevincrow1 on Twitter
www.linkedin.com/pub/kevin-crow/8/8b6/4bb/

Mark

Quote from: HMan on March 23, 2011, 04:50:02 PM
Exactly, Appriver.  They have a minimum fee of $45 or $50 per month, I think.  We have been happy for many years using them.  Changed a couple years ago to their hosted Exchange.

Google Apps is like $50/user/year I believe.
Mark Piontek, MBA
Director of Information Systems
BS in Information Systems Security

Marie (Zionkowski) Gozikowski

We do have education, and we have not had a virus in over a year...
and we have a router with blocked sites (but not a whitelist, which
may be what I need to do next) and virus detection which monitors
emails, and... but all of that won't stop someone from clicking on a link.

I guess he wants a more foolproof way of avoiding a virus, so is
thinking of having me monitor everything.  Yes, more work for me,
but I have the experience to weed out / be suspicious of things.

Appriver may be the way to go here... or hire a real IT person to
totally lock down everything :-)
Marie (Zionkowski) Gozikowski
Iddings Insurance Agency
Wyalusing, PA
WinTAM 11.1    SBS 2003 
8 users

Hans Manhave

Appriver has an ASCnet discount.  About $50/month, I think.

The firewall should not be overlooked either.  It will do its own virus scanning.  About $800 including a year of spyware, antivirus etc.  You should buy the three year service and not worry about it for some time.  A commercial grade firewall is far better in throughput than the home user models.  You need one.

And use OpenDNS.  It's free unless you want to pay for more.  Will do a lot of the white listing/black listing.

There is no way I want to screen everyone's mail.
Fantasy is more important than knowledge, because knowledge has its boundaries - Albert Einstein

Marie (Zionkowski) Gozikowski

Quote from: HMan on March 23, 2011, 04:50:02 PM
Ok, enough of my opinion.  Please don't unfriend me on FB.  :)

LOL Hans --- no worries there :-)

All good ideas - I will print this and give it to the boss...

Thanks!
Marie (Zionkowski) Gozikowski
Iddings Insurance Agency
Wyalusing, PA
WinTAM 11.1    SBS 2003 
8 users

Bloody Jack Kidd

There are no absolutes in security, i think it is important you establish that with your boss.  There is no surefire, foolproof solution.

I think google apps is free for up to 25 accounts and has some nice bonuses like shared calendars etc.
Sysadmin - Parallel42

Jeff Golas

Don't get me started on people who don't do IT having the solution before the problem. For an 8 person shop - you should have AV on each persons workstation that should handle Outlook Express or almost whatever email client you do use. On the opposite end I highly recommend Appriver or Messagelabs for email filtering if the budget is there.

Seriously you handling all incoming email would be a pain in the ---- and a waste of time :-) Other than something like faxes, NOBODY should be doing it that way just for the sake of virus protection. Thats why appriver and AV software exists :-)
Jeff Golas
Johnson, Kendall & Johnson, Inc. :: Newtown, PA
Epic Online w/CSR24
http://www.jkj.com