Thursday, March 05, 2009

The Wrong Tool for the Job

These days anti-virus and anti-spam are two very crucial components of a well run e-mail system. Due to how often spammers change their techniques, my company outsources this function to a vendor which provides both services. Both functions are designed and work fairly well.

Anti-Virus

For Anti-Virus they seem to run messages through multiple commercial anti-virus scanners on their servers. Messages that trigger positive are quarantined, and a notification will be sent to the site admin and/or the intended recipient of the message notifying them of what happened.

The site admin can report false positives to the vendor who will investigate and release a message if they can confirm that it was in fact a false positive. They also take an action to reduce future false positives based on what they find. These investigations tend to take 24 hours or so.

Anti-Spam

Spam tends to be a bit more subjective, so false positives tend to be higher than with Viruses. Due to this, their anti-spam offering makes it a lot easier to both prevent and deal with these situations.

Spam messages can either be tagged for users to filter on their own, or they can be actively filtered and put into a quarantine on their servers. Unlike quarantined virus mail, quarantined spam can be accessed and released by users directly.

In order to prevent false positives site admins are able to whitelist domains, e-mail addresses or IP addresses for specific mail relays. Whitelisting a domain is typically not a great idea in these days of e-mail address spoofing, but e-mail address and whitelisting relays works fairly well.

Where it falls apart

Sounds good so far, right?

Well, here's where it all goes wrong. It appears that anti-virus vendors have discovered that they can use their scanning engines to pick up certain types of phishing and scam e-mails, essentially adding anti-spam into their anti-virus product.

A phishing or a scam mail is SPAM, not a VIRUS. The difference here cause a big problem when you get spam levels of false positives while removing the user's ability to release their own messages and the site admin's ability to implement an sort of whitelisting.

That's when you start getting end user reports of mail threads with customers going missing. Add in a 24 hour turn around time for releasing the messages when the problem is discovered and you start to consider deep-sixing your vendor.

Tuesday, March 03, 2009

Wooo.. Kindle

Being a big reader and a tech gear junkie, I was rather tempted when Amazon announced the Kindle back in 2007. Somehow I managed to hold out on buying it until they announced the 2.0 version in early February. I pre-ordering it right away, and got my hands on it just last week.

So far, I like it. Its thinner than I expected. Definitely very easy to use. I can hold it in one hand and access most of the controls that I need to read a book. The left side has the "Previous Page" and "Next Page" buttons while on the right side the "Previous Page" button is replaced by a "Home" button. Since I tend to read books in one direction, this seems to work fine.

The free built in wireless is great for getting books, and occasionally pulling up text-only web sites. Due to the rather slow refresh on screen changes using it as a regular web browser is a bit tough.

My biggest complaint is the DRM for files through the Kindle store. After being bitten by DRM from the iTunes Music store, I definitely have a bad taste in my mouth over DRM. Luckily there are other options out there.

The first for me is Many Books. They offer a lot of free content in quite a few eBook formats, including both the native Kindle format and Mobibook which the Kindle also supports. They even have a Mobile Interface which works well from the Kindle itself. Most of the content has elapsed copyrights (older books), but there are occasionally newer books either available with sample chapters or content that was published under a Creative Commons License.

Next was O'Reilly. Being a big tech book reader, I have a lot of O'Reilly books.

O'Reilly offers a number of their books in DRM-free E-Book formats, including the Kindle supported Mobibook format. They're not free, but I don't have any objection to paying for content, just having its usage limited by DRM. They even provide free updates to the books as new revisions are published. I just wish they made it a bit easier to get a list of just their books available in E-Book format.

While I definitely like the Kindle, the only thing I'm not sure about at this point is if it was worth the cost or not. The Kindle costs $360. Sony's offering is quite a bit cheaper, although I have no idea how it compares feature wise.