PhillipsTaylorBrown Knowledgebase

Knowledgebase Home | Glossary | Favorites | IT Support Knowledgebase Home | Glossary | Favorites | IT Support
Search the Knowledgebase Browse by Category

Ten reasons why Mail Essentials is better than the Exchange 2007 IMF

Article Details

Last Updated
13th o January, 2010

User Opinions (6 votes)
100% thumbs up 0% thumbs down

How would you rate this answer?
Helpful
Not helpful
GFI software produces what we consider to be the best anti spam product on the market today. We’ve been using Mail essentials for over 9 years, and we can usually stop 95 – 98% of all spam with no (or very few) false positives.
This article explains why we think Mail Essentials is an ‘essential’ purchase, and why in today’s spam climate – the token offering by Microsoft – the Exchange Intelligent Message filter just doesn’t cut it.

One

Block lists

Both the Exchange IMF and Mail Essentials  support user defined block lists, but the IMF doesn’t support SURBL lists (lists of websites that have appeared in spam emails).

Mail Essentials Blacklists

 
Two

Different Actions for Different Technologies

Mail Essentials enables you to chose what to do for each anti spam technology – for instance, you might want to delete a message with a blacklisted keyword on it without sending an NDR, but make messages from senders that are on a block list go into the recipients junk mail folder. With the exchange IMF you can only forward quarantined emails to a predefined email address – also all inbound mails that are found to be on a block list are not received (as it’s a connection based technology).

Mail Essentials Filter Actions

 
Three

NDR spam 

This is probably the most awkward type of spam for network administrator as you get lots of calls from users thinking they’ve been used as a mail relay or ‘hacked’. Exchange just doesn’t know how to deal with this – and always appears to let it through, Mail Essentials new SpamRazer technology is very effective at removing it completely.

Mail Essentials Spam Razer

Four

Blacklists & Whitelists

Exchange 2007 has a whitelist, but no blacklist – this means you cannot block emails based on the content of the message. Mail Essentials lets you specify blacklisted words, and also what to do with them based on where they appear in the message for instance only block the word if it appears in the message body, if it appears in the subject then let it through.

Mail Essentials Blacklist

 
Five

Blocking based on languages

Mail Essentials lets you block messages based on the character sets that are in use in the message, this is very good at stopping spam with Chinese websites trying to sell you fake Rolexes etc. Exchange server doesn’t have this capability.

Mail Essentials Language Checking

 
Six

Anti Phishing

GFI has it’s own list of websites that pretend to be banking sites so they can steal your banking details. These are blocked so they never even reach your users. Exchange doesn’t have this functionality.

Mail Essentials Filters

 
Seven

Bayesian Filter Training

This is my favourite, not because of the Bayesian technology but that it empowers users into training the anti spam filter. You’ve not only got the benefit of training the Bayesian filter, but also your users will not call you to complain about spam and they feel much better about the spam they receive as they will be able to deal with it themselves (thus reducing calls to the helpdesk).

Mail Essentials Bayesian Filter Training

 
Eight

The Realtime Dashboard

It’s really hard with Exchange Server to confirm that mail flow is working without enabling transport logging and checking the content of those log files. The realtime dashboard gives you a graphical representation of your servers email flow.

Mail Essentials Dashboard

 
Nine

Spam Reporting

The Management reports in Mail Essentials are very useful for showing your management exactly how much spam is being blocked. Most managers are blissfully unaware of the amount of spam that they could be receiving – giving them the reports from Mail Essentials gives you the opportunity to show that the systems you’ve put in place are working and you’ll probably get a well earned pat on the back - and if you haven't already - justifies the cost of Mail Essentials to the management.  There is no spam reporting whatsoever with Exchange 2007.

Mail Essentials Reporting

 
Ten

The Auto Whitelist

When one of your users sends an email to a recipient outside of your company, that email address gets automatically added to the whitelist. After a short while you will find that all your partner companies email addresses will be on that list. You usually find that most of your companies’ communications with its partners and customers will not have any issue – no matter what the content of the message is.

Mail Essentials Auto Whitelist

 
Visitor Comments
No visitor comments posted. Post a comment
Post Comment for "Ten reasons why Mail Essentials is better than the Exchange 2007 IMF"
To post a comment for this article, simply complete the form below. Fields marked with an asterisk are required.
   Your Name:
   Email Address:
* Your Comment:
* Enter the code below:
 
Related Articles
No related articles were found.
Attachments
No attachments were found.


Virtualization Experts


Microsoft Support


IT Security Experts


GFI Silver Partner