Spam was killing us! Here is what we did to help!

Published: 2010-03-17. Last Updated: 2010-03-17 19:29:12 UTC
by Deborah Hale (Version: 1)
14 comment(s)

 

I work for a smallish ISP in the Midwest.  In late September and the month of October we began getting blasted with spam and DHA's from all over the world.  We had been utilizing a spam filtering service but it was not keeping up. We billed the customers for the service and they were starting to complain. They were getting so much spam in their inboxes that they felt like they were wasting their money.  In October when the problem became so bad that it started affecting our mail servers ability to process mail any longer we knew we had to do something.  We had been "test driving" a spam filter device by Red Condor.  The accounts that had been moved over to the Red Condor filter were virtually spam free. We decided to implement the Red Condor solution across the board on the server that was being hammered the worst.  This server has just over 9,000 accounts on it.  We turned up the Red Condor box at about 4pm and by 7:00am the next morning the quarantine boxes had been created for all customers.  No interaction required, it simply verified each inbox as the emails arrived for the account.  If the account did not exist it threw the spam away, if the account did exist it created the inbox and then determined whether the email was spam or was legit (autodiscover does not work with Exchange Servers).

We decided to "give the service away" as part of the customers Internet service.  In reality we have been the ones to benefit from the service.  The mail server has been purring along for months now and our customers are much happier.  They literally have had no spam hit their inboxes.  We have been in the learn mode for a while and slowly started migrating other customers over to the device.  It has not missed a hit.  The other thing that is amazing is the ease in setting up the "accounts" on Red Condor.  With the previous service it was about a 15 minute process to setup each domain.  It was a series of long drawn out steps to setup the accounts.  With Red Condor it takes less than a minute to setup a new account/domain.  If I can use autodiscover to create the inboxes then the setup task is done.  Change the MX record and I am good to go.

Now here is the amazing part.  The reporting available with the product is unbelievable.  At a glance I can see just how much work this single device is doing.  Here is a report for the domain that has just over 9,000 accounts.  This is a summary of the transactions handled for the domain since March 1, 2010.   You see that out of almost 20 million emails handled only 713,222 (3.6%) were actually delivered.

March 2010

 

Disposition

 

Category

Deliver

Markup

Quarantine

Block

Total

 

Size

 

OK

638,116

 

 

 

638,116

3.2%

108GB

32.1%

Unprotected

2,905

 

 

 

2,905

0.0%

60MB

0.0%

Friends

72,201

 

 

 

72,201

0.4%

17GB

5.2%

Enemies

 

 

176

 

176

0.0%

31MB

0.0%

Virus

 

 

 

55,587

55,587

0.3%

7,109MB

2.1%

Phish

 

 

434,661

2,218

436,879

2.2%

1,165MB

0.3%

Keyword

 

 

 

 

0

0.0%

0

0.0%

Adult

 

 

 

106,296

106,296

0.5%

270MB

0.1%

Spam

 

919

13,412,089

42,939

13,455,947

68.1%

154GB

45.9%

Junk

 

1,718

349,796

697

352,211

1.8%

9,223MB

2.7%

Blank

 

 

489

2

491

0.0%

1,073KB

0.0%

Foreign

 

 

12,707

33

12,740

0.1%

159MB

0.0%

Risky Attachment

 

 

16

 

16

0.0%

18MB

0.0%

Unresolved Sender

 

 

 

 

0

0.0%

0

0.0%

Invalid Recipient

 

 

 

4,623,107

4,623,107

23.4%

38GB

11.3%

Total

713,222

2,637

14,209,934

4,830,879

19,756,672

 

335GB

 

 

3.6%

0.0%

71.9%

24.5%

       


It isn't hard to understand now why my poor mail server was weeping on a daily basis.  We are now in the process of moving the remaining customers, accounts and domains over to the Red Condor system.  

Spam and viruses have become such a big problem for ISP's world wide.  Until we can clean up the infected machines that are generating this spam and shut down the bad guys that are pushing this garbage at us, it is good to know that these types of systems exist.  

I would like to hear from our reader's.  What has helped your organization deal with spam and the pr

Keywords: spam filter
14 comment(s)

Trojan outbreak on a College Campus

Published: 2010-03-17. Last Updated: 2010-03-17 18:34:37 UTC
by Deborah Hale (Version: 1)
6 comment(s)

One of our readers just advised us that the college that he is associated with has had a major outbreak of  Trojan.Win32.Scar.bwgf (Kaspersky).  Michael reported:

"We are now in major clean up mode.  All the file servers have been removed from the network to prevent further spread.

Basically the virus hides all the files in a directory and the directory itself.  It then adds a file of 74K with the same name as the file with a .exe.  So a user wishing to open
their word document would actually be infecting themselves with the virus."

Michael asked if we had received any other reports of infection from this Trojan.  A quick look on Google it appears that some variation of this has been around for a while.  
It looks like his campus may be dealing with an updated version. 
 

If anyone else is seeing any activity for this Trojan give us a shout.  Thanks Michael for reporting this to us.

 

Deb Hale Long Lines, LLC

Keywords: Trojan Scar
6 comment(s)

Comments


Diary Archives