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Date:      Thu, 4 May 2000 21:05:37 +0200 (EET)
From:      Taavi Talvik <taavi@uninet.ee>
To:        Jeremiah Gowdy <jgowdy@home.com>
Cc:        Matthew Dillon <dillon@apollo.backplane.com>, Lloyd Rennie <lloyd@vbc.net>, hackers@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: ILOVEYOU
Message-ID:  <Pine.BSF.3.95.1000504205419.26609A-100000@ns.uninet.ee>
In-Reply-To: <002b01bfb5f7$568d17a0$5a5d0418@vista1.sdca.home.com>

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On Thu, 4 May 2000, Jeremiah Gowdy wrote:

> > Yes, it was real virus and quite nasty one. Which remainds us,
> > that quite soon we cannot live without freebsd naitive virus
> > scanning engine. Such things don't spread so easily, when ISPs
> > are able to scan e-mail and other content they serve.

> lol.  The only way you could really have a virus in freebsd is if it was
> launched or infected as root.  Otherwise the virus would be VERY limited.
> If you are talking about scanning incoming email for viruses/scripts that
> were destined for Windows computers, ok, I'd say that's not a bad idea.

Yes, I was talking about virus scanning on behalf of Windows users.
Anyway, most files, emails, web pages are served or pass through
unix (and quite often *BSD) systems. There seems to be program
called AMAVIS (http://satan.oih.rwth-aachen.de/AMaViS/amavis.html), which
can do some scanning. It probably needs some investigation and
freebsd porting.

best regards,
taavi
-----------------------------------------------------------
Taavi Talvik                    | Internet: taavi@uninet.ee 
Unineti Andmeside AS            | phone: +372 6405150
Ravala pst. 10                  | fax: +372 6405151
Tallinn 10143, Estonia          |



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