One more reason to dislike AOL
Hey everyone,Have any of your had experience with the new "no-tolerance" type AOL policy whereby if a virus is sent to one of their customers the email server where the virus originated from is blacklisted. Then when you try to send an email to an AOL customer you get back something about your server may be compromised.
So now despite whether or not you run Linux you must now start running some type of antivirus scanner on your outgoing email to prevent win32 viruses from being sent to AOL.
Also seems that after the first time they unblock you (by calling them and going through a process then waiting 48 hours for the block to lift) they will be harder on you if you are blocked again.
This is especially bad for web hosting companies who host 100's if not 1000's of customers (any of which could get infected with a win32 virus which ends up sending itself via your servers).
We are now using ClamAV I'm just wondering if anyone else is having a problem with all this? I understand AOL wants to protect it's customers and all but It annoys me to think that Win32 viruses are now a Linux issue as well. How hard is it for the end user to run Anti-virus considering their the ones running software at risk for the viri in the first place.