On Thu, 2005-01-27 at 09:25 -0800, Dennis Peterson wrote:
> We do a lot of on-line commerce. We cannot tolerate many false positives. > Phishing exploits are something we deal with through education first, and > filtering second. As phishers become more sophisticated and numerous false > positives will rise leaving education as the final solution. I prefer > using my filter processes for defending against them as I can fine tune > them to our needs.
And how many Phishing false positives have you had exactly?
All of them. ;)
Seriously, that's an unfair question. When you're deleting people's email, how would they find out if there was a false positive? With spam, it's standard practice to review a junk-mail box for false positives regularly. Viruses are treated differently; nobody checks them for false positives. That's why this is such a concern for those of us who depend on email.
Damian Menscher -- -=#| Physics Grad Student & SysAdmin @ U Illinois Urbana-Champaign |#=- -=#| 488 LLP, 1110 W. Green St, Urbana, IL 61801 Ofc:(217)333-0038 |#=- -=#| 4602 Beckman, VMIL/MS, Imaging Technology Group:(217)244-3074 |#=- -=#| <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> www.uiuc.edu/~menscher/ Fax:(217)333-9819 |#=- -=#| The above opinions are not necessarily those of my employers. |#=- _______________________________________________ http://lists.clamav.net/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/clamav-users