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outlook
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Outlook 2007i think kaspersky AV and outlook have a problem when the mail filter is
activated on the AV and since i have turned it off all incoming mail is downloaded then perm. deleted out so i can not even read it in the mail box. anyone have a fix for this? iodine <iod***@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
> i think kaspersky AV and outlook have a problem when the mail filter It is normal for a POP client to download and delete messages. ALter your > is activated on the AV and since i have turned it off all incoming > mail is downloaded then perm. deleted out so i can not even read it > in the mail box. anyone have a fix for this? account properties to leave a copy of the downloaded messages on the server. Tools>Account Settings>Change>More Settings>Advanced tab>Leave a copy of messages on the server. There is never a need to scan incoming mail and it's often a bad idea. -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook]
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"Brian Tillman" wrote: The problem is it deletes them from my outlook inbox before i ever read them > iodine <iod***@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote: > > > i think kaspersky AV and outlook have a problem when the mail filter > > is activated on the AV and since i have turned it off all incoming > > mail is downloaded then perm. deleted out so i can not even read it > > in the mail box. anyone have a fix for this? > > It is normal for a POP client to download and delete messages. ALter your > account properties to leave a copy of the downloaded messages on the server. > Tools>Account Settings>Change>More Settings>Advanced tab>Leave a copy of > messages on the server. > > There is never a need to scan incoming mail and it's often a bad idea. > -- > Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] > > ... and some are like e-bill notices and such iodine <iod***@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
> The problem is it deletes them from my outlook inbox before i ever Outlook will not do that on its own. First, make sure your Inbox is not > read them .. and some are like e-bill notices and such filtered in any way and you are using the Messages view. Next, make sure you have no rules. Third, make sure you are NOT scanning incoming mail with anything. -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook]
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"Brian Tillman" <tillman1***@yahoo.com> wrote in message I guess you were not around when Love Letter hit were you? If you WERE, do news:#tJ7DE6LIHA.6108@TK2MSFTNGP03.phx.gbl... > iodine <iod***@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote: > >> i think kaspersky AV and outlook have a problem when the mail filter >> is activated on the AV and since i have turned it off all incoming >> mail is downloaded then perm. deleted out so i can not even read it >> in the mail box. anyone have a fix for this? > > It is normal for a POP client to download and delete messages. ALter your > account properties to leave a copy of the downloaded messages on the > server. Tools>Account Settings>Change>More Settings>Advanced tab>Leave a > copy of messages on the server. > > There is never a need to scan incoming mail and it's often a bad idea. you remember all the trouble it caused? That statement is disingenuous at best, and borderline stupid. Things like Love Letter and that ilk are exactly the reason WHY you should scan incoming mail. I ran our network and Exchange Server with 240 users. It just so happens I went in early that morning and luckily there were only a few others there when I noticed a weird attachment from one of my users. As soon as the second one hit, I turned to our other senior IT guy, and told him to lock everything down because we were infected. Fortuitously, I had caught it, and limited our infection to 7 total users. I even sat down with one of our programmers and had an in-house fix 2 hours before the AV houses had one. We got lucky, a great many others did not. See, my bosses thought like you did. They didn't want to pony up the money to make sure all our users were protected. NO, the current AV's at the time didn't stop it, but with the heuristic scanning and so forth, they may have caught others, which is the point. The reason the infection propagated in our company, and others was that users most generally open the emails without checking. If the problem can be caught before the user can open it, that is the whole reason for this option to exist. -- Ya know...the hurrier I go, the behinder I get. Remember to always engage brain, before putting mouth into gear. Kill the munge to reply by email. "DarkSentinel" <darksentinel@charter.nowantspam.net> wrote in message Umm no - it should scan when the ATTACHMENT is opened. The virus in the I news:%JY2j.91$cD1.67@newsfe07.lga... > > That statement is disingenuous at best, and borderline stupid. Things like > Love Letter and that ilk are exactly the reason WHY you should scan > incoming mail. Love you mail was in an ATTACHMENT - attachments should ALWAYS be scanned before opening. Doesn't matter where they are from. The company I was in was hit by that virus because one of the IT(!) staff opened the attachment without thinking.... DarkSentinel <darksentinel@charter.nowantspam.net> wrote:
> I guess you were not around when Love Letter hit were you? If you I've been in computing longer than any virus that exists (since 1968). Love > WERE, do you remember all the trouble it caused? Letter was an example of social engineering and, as with that virus and those that exist today as well, your brain is more effective than any antivirus program. It's simple: don't open attachments you didn't ask to receive, period. If you get one, either delete it out of hand or check with the apparent sender to make sure it was knowingly sent, save it to disk, and let your AV's resident scanner check it first, all WITHOUT OPENING it. -- Brian Tillman [MVP-Outlook] |
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