Troublesome 'dong' leads to VSO email overhaul

Too many genuine emails were going astray...

NEWS

Voluntary Services Overseas, the global charity, has hailed a rollout of email filtering services from Postini as a success after the company managed to reduce a major problem with false positives and management overheads across the organisation.

VSO is based in 40 countries worldwide and employs 930 people, many of whom work in some of the world's poorest or most troubled regions.

Increasingly it relies upon email to keep in touch with many staff. However, due to large numbers of false positives, David Sims, technical services manager at VSO, said email was creating a considerable management overhead.

As such, Sims said he took the decision to switch from Clearswift's MIMEsweeper product to Postini's managed service.

Sims told silicon.com: "We were looking for something to remove the daily management because we're not a huge team and myself and my senior engineer were spending more and more of our time chasing after emails that people hadn't got or that were blocked.

"It was taking us about half a man-day per week."

Many of the issues VSO experienced related to false positives.

Sims added: "Being an international organisation we have a number of issues with off-the-peg services where you get a list of bad words to check. As an example we have a Vietnamese office and the currency in Vietnam is called the dong. We also have an office in Vanuatu which at one time was on everybody's blacklist as spammers."

This meant some emails within the organisation were wrongly being fingered as spam or inappropriate content.

Under the current system Sims said he is able to establish his own white list and black list and has seen a marked decrease in the amount of false positives, while virus and spam detection remains as high, if not higher, than with the previous system.

Problems with keywords creating false positives were commonplace several years ago. UK counties, for example, whose names end in 'sex', such as Essex and Sussex, experienced serious problems in the early days of spam filtering when crude Bayesian filtering detected that word.

A spokesman for Postini told silicon.com VSO is typical of mid-sized organisations which lack the resources to tackle all their IT requirements in-house. Something such as email filtering and the day-to-day fire-fighting it can require are therefore increasingly being signed over to managed service providers.

VSO started working with Postini in 2005 and Sims claims the managed service offering is also more conducive to supporting a dispersed and global workforce, reducing his need to actually touch machines in far-flung territories.

Although neither party was willing to confirm the exact value of the deal, Postini would confirm its usual per-user price has been discounted for the charity to "a single figure sum per user".

Comments

There are 2 comments. Join the discussion

  1. 1. Richard

    Reads too much like marketing puff:

    I like Silicon's reporting of IT topics;

    Normally, reports are reliable.

    Unfortunately, this one appears to be favouring one company against a rival.

    - Was Clearswift given a chance to reply?

    - Were the differences between these, and other, competing products checked?

    (Doesn't Clearswift's product provide similar features, perhaps implemented in a different way?)

    Reporting the high pressures imposed on IT staff running a small but global company is interesting.

    We all suffer from the plague of spam; it's especially serious when it disrupts scarce resources, including expensive or low-bandwidth communications connections: We do need solutions; both quick fixes and long-term solutions.

    I do hope that future reports will be more reliable.

    • 13 June 2007 13:23
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  2. 2. anonymous

    If the article is quoting the customer's own testimonial on how the new service improved their situation how can it be considered unreliable?

    My organisation is using a software based spam filter too and are exploring outsourcing. Our current vendor can only fix our problem if we rip and replace what we have had in place for 3 years but the replacement will still be on our network storing suspicious email on our storage.

    So if we have to make a change - we plan to make a change.

    • 15 June 2007 13:22
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