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Ipswitch Adds Anti-Spam to ICS Ipswitch partnered with Mail-Filters.com to add anti-spam to its Ipswitch Collaboration Suite.
Lexington, Mass.-based Ipswitch partnered with San Mateo, Calif.-based Mail-Filters.com to add anti-spam to its groupware product, the Ipswitch Collaboration Suite (ICS). The technology will be available in April of 2005 and current customers will receive the anti-spam feature upgrade as part of the Ipswitch service agreement. "The product needs to be easy to use, but it needs to be tough on spam, like a candy with a hard outer shell," says Alex Niehaus, Ipswitch vice president of marketing. Ipswitch chose Mail-Filters.com because the company maintains a 24x7 anti-spam center. "Unlike anti-virus, where a purely mechanical approach works (our anti-virus is carrier grade Symantec), we believe you need a human component to build an effective an anti-spam program." Those tricky spammers Spammer techniques the engine is designed to thwart include (according to the company's .pdf white paper Spam Filters Need The Human Touch):
Niehaus says that the STAR Engine does not slow down his company's ICS for a simple reason. "The STAR Engine is a separate process that finds the spam. ICS simply asks the STAR Engine if an e-mail is spam and gets a yes or no answer." The human touch "They have language skills to read spam in foreign languages and they proactively acquire spam in the normal ways, such as though honeypots and by encouraging their customers to send them spam," adds Niehaus. "They're particularly interested in false positives," he adds. "We can send our false positives to another address." So the system's not perfectno anti-spam system is. If your business customers are frustrated with SpamAssassin or the blacklists, this will be a serious improvement for them.
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