Posts Tagged ‘spam’

Zimbra Junk Mail Options You Didn’t Know Existed

I was poking around on the Zimbra forums today during some downtime and I ran across a little gem regarding configuration around a few options regarding spam delivery to users. The question was about disabling of spam filtering on a per-user basis (Yes, not really ideal, but sometimes you have to give users something I like to call ‘exactly what they asked for’), but I found even more than I expected.

Anyway, I thought I would highlight a few of the gems that I discovered.

Disabling mail to the Junk folder

This was actually the original question that I was trying to answer. Most Zimbra admins know how to whitelist/blacklist senders and other various tweaks in the Zimbra wiki, but I didn’t realize until today that we can actually configure Zimbra to not send mail filtered as junk to the Junk folder. This can be done per user, per domain, or per class of service (COS).

zmprov ma user@whatan00b.com +amavisSpamLover TRUE +amavisBypassSpamChecks TRUE

To disable, just make the + a -:
zmprov ma user@whatan00b.com -amavisSpamLover TRUE -amavisBypassSpamChecks TRUE
(or you can just set to false, but the default is false – I do like me some clean configs!)

And of course, change the command ma (modifyAccount) to match whatever type of object you want if you’re not modifying a user.

Letting banned files through to users

Every once in a while, I’ve struggled with users needing to get things like encrypted zip files or other suspicious-looking files. Not wanting to let all kinds of viruses though by disabling virus scanning and file extension blocks, it always ends up in a battle. Perhaps I’m the last to learn this one, but it’s actually easily bypassed on a per-user, per-domain, or per-COS basis.
zmprov ma user@whatan00b.com +amavisBannedFilesLover TRUE

You can also disable virus scanning for those various levels as well:
zmprov ma user@whatan00b.com +amavisBypassVirusChecks TRUE

Whitelisting and Blacklisting via zmprov (upgrade-safe!)

One of the new, well-known, features of Zimbra 6 is that you can now allow users to have their own white and blacklists, controllable within the user interface. Whitelisting and blacklisting has, of course, always been supported, but it’s been a pain as long as I’ve been managing Zimbra servers. If you’re one that already knew which wiki article I was referring to above, you know what I mean! To make matters worse, those settings have to be re-applied after upgrades.

While adding blacklist and whitelist senders to a user’s list via zmprov is expected (after all, you can configure it in the web client), what hasn’t really been touted – as far as I’ve read – is that those filters can easily be applied per domain as well. While that’s not really a new feature by any means, it does mean that those whitelist and blacklist lists are in Zimbra’s LDAP – where they should’ve been all along. That, and LDAP doesn’t get wiped during upgrades / service restarts like some config files do.

zmprov md whatan00b.com +amavisBlacklistSender @exchange.microsoft.com

Loosening up spam tag levels

You can also adjust the spam scoring levels to mark messages as junk/not junk on the various levels as well. The properties to adjust are: amavisSpamTagLevel, amavisSpamTag2Level, and amavisSpamKillLevel.

Warning: with these settings, be sure that you know exactly what each of these mean. That rule always applies, of course, but getting those settings wrong could cause your mail server to drop messages without bouncing them, thus neither sender nor receiver knows!

So many more!
This turned into a much longer post than I expected, but there are so many more options available! Check out /opt/zimbra/conf/attrs/amavisd-new-attrs.xml on your Zimbra server for even more config options.

Extra Credit
Also, check out /opt/zimbra/conf/attrs/zimbra-attrs.xml for even more goodness (unrelated to junk mail).

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Filed under How-Tos / Tips : Comments (3) : Jul 26th, 2010

FTC Shuts Down Spammers

E-mail administrators around the world are rejoicing after a large spam-sending organization was caught and shut down today. The Federal Trade Commission was able to make a federal court freeze funds of the group known as HerbalKing which at once point was said to be responsible for approximately one-third of spam. Spam has been estimated as being 90% of all e-mail traffic. While the freeze probably will not actually affect spam traffic as a whole, it is definitely the largest of its kind.

Most spam, including the messages sent by HerbalKing are sent using groups of computers containing malware called botnets. It’s likely that after HerbalKing is shut down that another spam group will take over this botnet and use it to send spam, but it could be a sign progress on the anti-spam front from law enforcement.

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Filed under News : Comments (0) : Oct 14th, 2008