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Home >> Government >> Case Studies and Best Practices From Canada and Internationally

Multi-layer system eases load on government mail server

Multi-layer system eases load on government mail server

By:  Kathleen Lau  On: 15 Feb 2007 For: ITWorldCanada.com Creator

Significantly reducing the quantity of unwanted e-mail and increasing the speed of message delivery were just some benefits the City of Richmond in British Columbia, experienced after implementing a combined messaging and security system.

The difference, here, is that Cloudmark deviates from the traditional approach of "static" content filtering – identifying keywords in a message – to catching those e-mails that have undergone polymorphic mutations, says Dave Champine, senior director of product marketing at Cloudmark.

For instance, spammers' techniques have evolved to include "image spam" that relays a message and hyperlink in image form, as opposed to text.

Cloudmark's algorithms, says Champine, would identify an image spam by evaluating whether it's a repeat visitor based on the number of bits and bytes, or the number of coloured pixels.

Once the filtering component has placed identifiers – good and bad – on messages, they are routed to the mail server which then distributes the good mail to the recipient's Inbox, and the bad mail to the junk folder.

The advantage to implementing this joint messaging security system is that e-mail administrators will have but one vendor to deal with. "They'll have one piece of software to maintain, rather than two components residing in two different places," says Simpson.

A multi-layered messaging security system, such as the City of Richmond's recent implementation, is definitely a direction the entire industry will gradually take, says Carmi Levy, senior research analyst with London-based Info-Tech Research group.

"Relying on one particular tool, class of tools, or one layer of protection is not adequate in this day and age when the types of abuses of messaging are so varied and constantly changing."

The rate of message-borne attacks – e-mail, instant messaging, voice, unified messaging – are on the rise, says Levy. "These are all vectors for attack and they need to be locked down in an increasingly stringent manner."

The City itself declined comment saying it "did not want to invite activity" around its e-mail security strategy.

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Kathleen Lau Kathleen Lau was a senior writer with ITWorldCanada.com and ComputerWorld Canada from December 2006 to August 2011.In her role as senior writer, she covered broadly technology news and issues r... more
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