Hi! 7-Янв-2005 14:11 [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Brian Morrison) wrote to ClamAV users ML <clamav-users@lists.clamav.net>:
>> (Does this mean, that ClamAV developers suggest, that _all_ >> machines, >> where ClamAV will work, - at home, at corporations, at Nuclear Plants >> - should be internet-connected?) BM> ClamAV is primarily for scanning email, I plan to protect files (or, more precise, to make me sure, that my _machine_ doesn't infected). BM> I can't see how a machine that BM> receives email can be completely divorced from the internet. To work with emails, there exist also other ways, beside POP/SMTP over TCP/IP. BM> It may not have direct access, but what about its local mail server(s)? Of course, mail servers itself have inet access, but this is another story. BM> I can't work out exactly what your objections are to the way that ClamAV BM> provides database updates. There are some objections: - updating from internet reqiures lived online access; this is not always possible - either no online at all or broken link (do you remember how NIMDA virus broke internet in Korea?). - non-broadband users pays _for traffic_ (whereas ClamAV bases are not too small, especially in compare with, for example, Dr.Web). - "only one" way may be decepted (though, for me this is too abstract thing). If think more, there may be found also other objections. BM> There is always a way of ensuring firewalled BM> access for a machine that needs to run ClamAV and if even that risk is BM> too great then surely someone is taking better care to ensure that site BM> policy prevents unauthorised access to any computer under all circumstances. _______________________________________________ http://lists.clamav.net/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/clamav-users