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"As we are a non-profit organisation,
the fact that we are keeping away dozens of unwanted mails,
viruses and exploits every day with GFI technology means that
we are dramatically decreasing the TCO of our IT infrastructure."
- Pascal Tesch, CIO at radio 100,7, Luxembourg |
Radio 100,7 relies on GFI MailEssentials for Exchange/SMTP
and GFI MailSecurity for Exchange/SMTP to block email spam,
viruses, exploits and threats at server level, before these can
be distributed to its users. Both these products also help the organization
to drastically reduce the total cost of ownership (TCO) of its IT
infrastructure.
Radio 100,7 (www.100komma7.lu)
is a public, state-sponsored radio that has been on air in Luxembourg
since 1993. Its main focus is to broadcast a 100% advertisement-free,
non-commercial schedule, with a primary accent on social and cultural
issues. Its musical agenda is dominated by classical and non-mainstream
music, characterised by themed shows and the coverage of external
events, such as the annual Luxembourg Blues N
Jazz Rally and contributions to the EBU-Network through recordings
of concerts from the philharmonic orchestra held in Luxembourg.
As a public radio, we receive all sorts of information, sent
to us by various individuals and organizations, Pascal
Tesch, CIO at radio 100,7 explained. Whereas three years
ago, we received dozens of faxes a day, we now receive and distribute
hundreds of emails daily. Email has become our primary communication
tool for both internal and external communication.
Yet, though email has simplified corporate life at the radio station,
it also presents a number of problems that were crucial for Mr.
Tesch to solve.
A single email virus would be a disaster
As we are now running a 100% digital radio, based on computerized
editing and storage of audio-files, we cannot afford a single virus,
Mr. Tesch stressed. One email virus would spell disaster for
us - it would block our flow of work and all our communications,
and would result in huge recovery costs too.
Another issue the radio now has to face is spam: Most of
the emails we receive contain valuable information, but recently
ever more spam was filling our mailboxes. In the rush to get rid
of these unwanted emails, there is a real risk of deleting the wrong
mail among dozens of best price, porn and other such messages. We
needed to tackle the problem of unwanted mail without affecting
the email messages we did want to receive.
Radio 100,7 planned to solve both issues by sourcing the right
software products that would support their mail server, Microsoft
Exchange Server.
Keeping spam away
Among all the server level anti-spam candidates, GFI MailEssentials
for Exchange/SMTP seemed to be the most appropriate product, mainly
because it offers a blend of features that work together to block
spam while allowing legitimate mails to come through as usual,
Mr. Tesch remarked.
GFI MailEssentials features Bayesian filtering technology to detect
spam based on message content. Rather than just checking for keywords,
GFI's Bayesian filter takes the whole message into consideration
as well as the content of valid emails sent by the organization
(known as 'ham'). This gives it a tremendous advantage over other
anti-spam solutions that only take spam into account. Bayesian filters
are widely acclaimed to be the best way to tackle spam because they
use statistical intelligence to analyze the content of the mail.
Besides, the product intelligently analyzes the email header and
identifies spam based on message field information, while also allowing
administrators to configure lists of keywords and phrases enabling
it to identify spam. GFI MailEssentials additionally offers support
for multiple DNS and local blacklists; the ability to block spam
by character set; and fake non-delivery reports generation. It also
includes a patented automatic whitelist management tool that automatically
adds all business partners to the whitelist so that their mail will
not be passed through the spam filter; this greatly reduces false
positives.
GFI MailEssentials was an all-round winner. The new Bayesian
feature included in GFI MailEssentials is a revolutionary approach
that shows how the company is at the forefront in finding new ways
to keep its customers spam-free, Mr. Tesch added.
An easy choice
To tackle email threats such as virus, exploits and Trojans, Mr.
Tesch felt that GFI MailSecurity, available in a suite with GFI
MailEssentials, was the obvious choice.
GFI MailSecurity for Exchange/SMTP is an email content checking,
exploit detection, threats analysis and anti-virus solution that
removes all types of email-borne threats before they can affect
an organizations email users. GFI MailSecurity's key features
include multiple virus engines, for virus engine independence and
better security; email content and attachment checking, to quarantine
dangerous content; an exploit shield, to detect emails with OS and
application exploits; an HTML threats engine, to disable HTML scripts;
a Trojan & Executable Scanner, to detect potentially malicious
executables; and more.
The GFI MailSecurity/GFI MailEssentials seemed to us to
be the ideal solution. We are particularly impressed with GFI MailSecuritys
inclusion of multiple virus engines, and its content filtering abilities.
Another good feature offered by the GFI MailEssentials & GFI MailSecurity
Suite is its seamless integration with the Microsoft environment.
Mr. Tesch said.
We were already familiar with GFI because we had used GFI
DownloadSecurity* with our ISA Server with satisfaction. So our choice
was very easy. We are now running GFI MailEssentials and GFI MailSecurity
to protect our Exchange Server. Weve installed them both at
the gateway.
Mr. Tesch is satisfied with these products in terms of the bottom
line, too: As we are a non-profit organisation, the fact that
we are keeping away dozens of unwanted mails, viruses and exploits
every day with GFI technology means that we are dramatically decreasing
the TCO of our IT infrastructure.
All product and company names herein may be trademarks of their respective owners.
February 2004
* Note: GFI DownloadSecurity has since been replaced by GFI WebMonitor for ISA Server.
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