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| Tags: bosss, box, email, flooding, help, ndrs |
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#1
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Outlook 2003 / Exchange 2003 sp2
One user (my boss!) is getting inundated with System Administrator NDR's. I know that these are coming back as a result of a spoofed email address. 300 + a day! We have anti spam and anti virus in our enterprise so I know they are propigating from outside. Anyway, Outlook 2003 will not allow a rule to be created to move all of these Sys Admin messages out of her Inbox, and I don't want to disable the NDRs all together. How can I keep the benefits of NDR's and yet allow my user to have a "clean" mailbox. I'm out of ideas thanks in advance, Ray |
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#2
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You would be better served by putting an SMTP gateway between your exchange
server and the internet, which would allow you to set rules as you desire. There are a number of free possibilites out there. http://www.freespamfilter.org/index.html is one. I suppose you could write a custom event sink for exchange... "Ray Gibson" wrote in message ... Outlook 2003 / Exchange 2003 sp2 One user (my boss!) is getting inundated with System Administrator NDR's. I know that these are coming back as a result of a spoofed email address. 300 + a day! We have anti spam and anti virus in our enterprise so I know they are propigating from outside. Anyway, Outlook 2003 will not allow a rule to be created to move all of these Sys Admin messages out of her Inbox, and I don't want to disable the NDRs all together. How can I keep the benefits of NDR's and yet allow my user to have a "clean" mailbox. I'm out of ideas thanks in advance, Ray |
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#3
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In ,
Ray Gibson typed: Outlook 2003 / Exchange 2003 sp2 One user (my boss!) is getting inundated with System Administrator NDR's. I know that these are coming back as a result of a spoofed email address. 300 + a day! We have anti spam and anti virus in our enterprise so I know they are propigating from outside. Anyway, Outlook 2003 will not allow a rule to be created to move all of these Sys Admin messages out of her Inbox, and I don't want to disable the NDRs all together. How can I keep the benefits of NDR's and yet allow my user to have a "clean" mailbox. I'm out of ideas thanks in advance, Ray Your disabling NDRs won't do it, anyway - these weren't issued by your server. They were issued by the recipients' servers, and sent to your boss because he's the purported sender of the original messages. NDRs have become less than useful, but it's hard to convince a lot of admins to disable them outright. Sadly, I'm not sure what you can do to combat this - other than using your antivirus/antispam software to prevent delivery of the NDRs for the spoofed email. You could set up a rule based on "undeliverable" in the subject line, tho..... |
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#4
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Thanks for the reply.
You Lanwench have NDR's disabled? I'm seriously considering it. Kinda like a spam filter. It works 95% of the time for good. 5 % of the time it would be usefull! "Lanwench [MVP - Exchange]" ahoo.com wrote in message ... In , Ray Gibson typed: Outlook 2003 / Exchange 2003 sp2 One user (my boss!) is getting inundated with System Administrator NDR's. I know that these are coming back as a result of a spoofed email address. 300 + a day! We have anti spam and anti virus in our enterprise so I know they are propigating from outside. Anyway, Outlook 2003 will not allow a rule to be created to move all of these Sys Admin messages out of her Inbox, and I don't want to disable the NDRs all together. How can I keep the benefits of NDR's and yet allow my user to have a "clean" mailbox. I'm out of ideas thanks in advance, Ray Your disabling NDRs won't do it, anyway - these weren't issued by your server. They were issued by the recipients' servers, and sent to your boss because he's the purported sender of the original messages. NDRs have become less than useful, but it's hard to convince a lot of admins to disable them outright. Sadly, I'm not sure what you can do to combat this - other than using your antivirus/antispam software to prevent delivery of the NDRs for the spoofed email. You could set up a rule based on "undeliverable" in the subject line, tho..... |
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#5
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In ,
Ray Gibson typed: Thanks for the reply. You Lanwench have NDR's disabled? I'm seriously considering it. Yes, I usually disable them. Kinda like a spam filter. It works 95% of the time for good. 5 % of the time it would be usefull! Yep. "Lanwench [MVP - Exchange]" ahoo.com wrote in message ... In , Ray Gibson typed: Outlook 2003 / Exchange 2003 sp2 One user (my boss!) is getting inundated with System Administrator NDR's. I know that these are coming back as a result of a spoofed email address. 300 + a day! We have anti spam and anti virus in our enterprise so I know they are propigating from outside. Anyway, Outlook 2003 will not allow a rule to be created to move all of these Sys Admin messages out of her Inbox, and I don't want to disable the NDRs all together. How can I keep the benefits of NDR's and yet allow my user to have a "clean" mailbox. I'm out of ideas thanks in advance, Ray Your disabling NDRs won't do it, anyway - these weren't issued by your server. They were issued by the recipients' servers, and sent to your boss because he's the purported sender of the original messages. NDRs have become less than useful, but it's hard to convince a lot of admins to disable them outright. Sadly, I'm not sure what you can do to combat this - other than using your antivirus/antispam software to prevent delivery of the NDRs for the spoofed email. You could set up a rule based on "undeliverable" in the subject line, tho..... |
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#6
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I've been unsucessfull in any attempts to setup a rule. It runs through the
mailbox and leaves any messages that are from Sys admin regardless of the criteria .. "Lanwench [MVP - Exchange]" ahoo.com wrote in message ... In , Ray Gibson typed: Outlook 2003 / Exchange 2003 sp2 One user (my boss!) is getting inundated with System Administrator NDR's. I know that these are coming back as a result of a spoofed email address. 300 + a day! We have anti spam and anti virus in our enterprise so I know they are propigating from outside. Anyway, Outlook 2003 will not allow a rule to be created to move all of these Sys Admin messages out of her Inbox, and I don't want to disable the NDRs all together. How can I keep the benefits of NDR's and yet allow my user to have a "clean" mailbox. I'm out of ideas thanks in advance, Ray Your disabling NDRs won't do it, anyway - these weren't issued by your server. They were issued by the recipients' servers, and sent to your boss because he's the purported sender of the original messages. NDRs have become less than useful, but it's hard to convince a lot of admins to disable them outright. Sadly, I'm not sure what you can do to combat this - other than using your antivirus/antispam software to prevent delivery of the NDRs for the spoofed email. You could set up a rule based on "undeliverable" in the subject line, tho..... |
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