-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Hey all,
thank your very much for your responses. I added the signatures name to the whitelist which works flawless. I can see that sending an attachment with an double extension is somehow sensless and suspicious however I think you can't take that as a virus. We're using ClamAV for all our e-mail customers and we do enforce quite strict policies when it comes to viruses. That's why this fp caused some trouble. Do you lists fp removals in your database update mails? Kind regards, - -- Julian Hansmann 1&1 Mail & Media GmbH Mail Application Security Am 14.05.2014 03:08, schrieb Al Varnell: > > On Tue, May 13, 2014 at 05:38 PM, Benny Pedersen wrote: >> >> Sending the jpg file is not an option without puting it in a zip >> archive first? >> >> It does not pay of to compress jpg without jpg tools, that sayed >> if it just to get single attachment on mail it still make sense >> to use zip for a container file > > My impression is that this is not at all about a real .jpg file. > Rather it’s a malicious executable disguised to make you thing it’s > just a .jpg in order to get you to open it. > > > -Al- > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.22 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Thunderbird - http://www.enigmail.net/ iQEcBAEBAgAGBQJTdGcPAAoJEHVYMAtA/pVmy+MH/is01S9kupt1g5IrtCq8T90h Qwu5qnCuczjNFYuMt2SuMOlU6usTqfEYbPDqNe67z7oZX40EX9Bwp3oHqx5FS5nx VvHf6ZUVp9HKjHRDn01+gSHLQZK3SXG5YE6SCTgLv1xdkBuJLNzbJ9EZNGhOlmn8 Hv3+OiecxLLnad3xl6y/CtPVq4SholEubT80TFcplxteD84cR37rnTQYBVqG1JpO xfSmjrdlxDhm7h7CbPdS7Amc2zz0OcmZzTEn+7ttyI3tyhy67Co/qJ7abw5B4RYz hgU6NrBBiim+howT+C++BrBRL5+DJUB1yErI/+GwWiqVH0KsH6hu4K1igcRd9ws= =CRRN -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ Help us build a comprehensive ClamAV guide: https://github.com/vrtadmin/clamav-faq http://www.clamav.net/support/ml