On the issue of manually reviewing the mails to submit....isn't this the purpose of the quarantine directory? When it detects a phishing malware, look at the file in the quarantine directory.
On Sunday 14 November 2004 8:57 am, Julian Mehnle wrote: > Matt [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > Julian Mehnle wrote: > > > How can I configure ClamAV not to try to detect phishing and other > > > social engineering attacks? > > > > Why? Your prerogative, obviously, but I am just curious. > > For three reasons: > > 1. I consider filtering technically harmful messages for my users > acceptable, but I think filtering social engineering to be censorship. > I would rather educate my users. > > 2. While recognizing technical engineering (viruses, worms, other > malware) automatically has proven to be feasible, I _generally_ do not > believe in recognizing social engineering (scams, phishing, etc.) > automatically. Technical state of the art is far from doing that > reliably. Without machines being able to understand the meaning of > text, any heuristics can only be a crook. I am using reputation > systems (AKA DNS blacklists) instead. > > 3. I am using the SpamCop reporting tool[1] to file complaints to ISPs > about spam (which specifically includes phishing attacks) that I > receive. SpamCop requires spam samples to be manually checked for > spamminess before being reported. Thus I _do_ want to receive social > engineering messages and classify them manually in order to report > them to SpamCop. > > Tomasz Kojm [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > Julian Mehnle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > How can I configure ClamAV not to try to detect phishing and other > > > social engineering attacks? > > > > Modify your mail scanner to pass "HTML.Phishing.*" through. > > Yes, I can do that. Is there an authoritative hierarchy of signature > names from which I can see what hierarchy branches ("HTML.Phishing.*", > etc.) I would have to whitelist? > > Besides there's oviously a fundamental difference between technical > malware and social engineering malware, so there should be a way to > configure what to detect and what not. > > References: > 1. http://www.spamcop.net/anonsignup.shtml > > _______________________________________________ > http://lists.clamav.net/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/clamav-users -- John Jolet Your On-Demand IT Department 512-762-0729 [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.jolet.net _______________________________________________ http://lists.clamav.net/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/clamav-users