Gwava makes Linux move

Salt Lake City – Montreal-based software vendor Gwava announced at this year’s Novell BrainShare user conference that it is porting its e-mail surveillance solution for Novell’s GroupWise collaboration platform over to Linux.

The release of Gwava for Linux comes on the heels of the recent announcement at the Cebit trade show in Hannover, Germany, that Novell is releasing GroupWise 6.5 for Linux.

The move is part of the Waltham, Mass.-based vendor’s overall strategy to port all of its services over to Linux.

According to Gwava, its solution provides virus protection, spam prevention, content and bandwidth control, archiving and auditing specifically for GroupWise. Traditional file scanning won’t work for GroupWise because the platform encrypts all messages and stores them in an encrypted database, the firm said.

Richard Bliss, Gwava’s Orem, Utah-based vice-president of marketing, told ComputerWorld Canada that to address this issue, the Gwava solution “sits right in the (GroupWise) system to scan for spam and viruses. It watches the e-mail go back and forth,” and, based on rules set by the administrator, blocks messages that might have suspicious attachments or that are flagged as spam.

Tom Poitras, head of Gwava’s sales in Canada, added that Gwava’s antispam capabilities are based on heuristics and Bayesian technology. “It intelligently looks for a combination of key words or patterns and rates each [one] with a relative score,” Poitras explained.

The City of St. Louis originally picked up Gwava a couple of years ago as a content filtering solution for e-mail. Jerry Raske, network systems services administrator for the city, said that over a recent 25-day period, the city’s employees received 1.1 million e-mail messages.

“Between Novell Real-time blacklists (RTB),” a list of known spammer sources that administrators can subscribe to, “and Gwava, we blocked approximately 800,000 of them. Before implementing Gwava, we had users who were reporting 50 junk e-mails a day. The same users are now getting three to four a day.”

Out of all those messages, the city discovered only one confirmed false positive, which had the word “terrorism” in the subject line — it was an e-mail reporting bio-terrorism figures to the city’s health division.

The city has looked at archiving messages flagged as junk rather than just dumping them altogether, but has found that too overwhelming, Raske said. Peter van Nooten, president of Lan-Comm Consulting in Toronto, which peddles Gwava products, said that from a customer perspective the real headache is spam rather than viruses. “Spam is what the customers see. It’s such a big deal and a hassle that some are reluctant to use e-mail,” he said. “Some customers want to change their e-mail addresses just to get a way from it.”

Gwava said it hopes its newly ported solution, coupled with GroupWise for Linux, will help position Novell’s collaboration platform as a cost-effective alternative to Microsoft Exchange or Lotus Notes. Bliss said he expects Linux users, who have in the past been “underserved by not having a strong enterprise-level secure e-mail product,” to now jump on GroupWise as the collaboration product of choice.

The Gwava/GroupWise combination will provide added reassurance to enterprises that do not use Linux but are looking to adopt it, he predicted. Van Nooten said that for now, the Gwava for Linux offering “personally won’t make much of a difference. But when people start rolling their e-mail out to Linux servers, it’s good to know that we will have something to offer them.”

Gwava for Linux will be available for US$13 per user.

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Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

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