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Conference noted::seal

Title:SEAL
Moderator:GALVIA::SMITH
Created:Mon Mar 21 1994
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1989
Total number of notes:8209

1826.0. "Filter Out Pornographic mail?" by ZPOVC::CSNAQS () Mon Mar 03 1997 04:06

    Hi,
      Are there any solutions out there that filter/censor incoming mail
    whereby mail deemed to be unacceptable/pornographic are dropped at the
    firewall machine? I have an ISP that wants to do that because that is
    the country policy. 
    
    Regards.
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
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1826.1yeah, sureANNECY::CHATEL_MMon Mar 03 1997 04:3916
    OK everybody,
    
       That sounds like a good service item. Let's design together
    an algorithm for assigning a number to the pornographic level
    of a message (up to assigning numbers to images included in
    MIME messages). Then, we just need an rc.config variable
    called MAX_PORN_LEVEL that the mail transfer agent (sendmail
    or otherwise) can compare against... :-)
    
       Marc Chatel
    
    P.S.: In practice, you would want to use technology such as PICS,
          but that type of technology is certainly not easily applicable
          to e-mail messages (imagine forwarding all user e-mail to
          a "rating" body. Good grief, forget Orwell, this is better!!!)
    
1826.2not so sureTLAV02::RUDIMon Mar 03 1997 05:5020
    Gentlemen,
    
    	please show some (self)control :-).
    
    From a theoretical point of view and also technical, an interesting
    question. A (potential) customer here in Thailand wants some filtering
    as well, but out of fear for virusses.
    
    I guess no solution will ever be 100% as it's still possible to encrypt
    messages of any kind. Even with known encyption methods you would still
    need 'a bit of power' to decrypt, check and decide to forward. With
    unknown encryption method just trying may delay your mail a bit :-)
    
    Probably you could do simply checks on Subject, Contents type if ascii,
    etc. Maybe a VirusWall should include this type of functionality, let
    it seach for type = HIV
    
    Cheers,
    	rudi
    
1826.3How about procmail?EEMELI::HJONSSONEbbe JonssonMon Mar 03 1997 08:2510
Just a thought:

Given that AVFW uses sendmail as its local MTA, one could perhaps install
procmail and run it before sendmail? That would give one a modicum of control
over what gets delivered (on eg. a domain name basis) - I'm using procmail to
keep spammer sites off my system, but haven't done any research as to how it
would work in a firewall environment.

Rgs,
	[email protected]
1826.4BIGUN::nessus.cao.dec.com::MayneChurchill's black dogMon Mar 03 1997 16:0225
There are several ways of doing this.

Currently, smtpxd drops things into a queue and then invokes sendmail. You could 
change things so sendmail looked in a different queue, and your virus/porn 
checker looked in the first queue and only transferred allowable messages.

Another way is to use a checker such as Mimesweeper, which pretends to be the 
internal mail hub (relative to the firewall).

The only real way is to have a person read it. How is a mechanical checker to 
distinguish between "the government is bad" in the normal sense of the word, and 
"the government is bad" in the Michael Jackson sense of the word?

Either way, it's not going to work. As .2 says, it's all too easy to slip 
something past a mail checker. And if it did work: AOL (?) tried putting a rude 
words filter on their discussion groups, which if I remember correctly, forced 
completely legitimate discussion of "breast cancer" to become "hooter cancer" 
until somebody came to their senses.

Ah, Singapore. A friend of mine landed there a few years back and was forced to 
have a haircut before he was let out of the airport. Chewing gum is banned, too. 

The ISP wouldn't be CyberWay or SingNet, would it?

PJDM
1826.5CHEFS::16.37.11.45::PITTGone with the winsock ...Tue Mar 04 1997 05:314
Take a look at MIMEsweeper from Integralis.  That can make "go-no go"
decisions based on sender/recipient/content, or a combination of these.

T