Cisco Cisco Email Security Appliance C170 Guía Del Usuario
C-8
Cisco AsyncOS 8.5 for Email User Guide
Appendix C Example of Mail Policies and Content Filters
Overview of Incoming Mail Policies
Because the policy was just added, the link is named:
(use default)
.
Figure C-8
Editing the Anti-Spam Settings for the Sales Team Policy
Step 2
On the anti-spam security service page, change the value for “Enable Anti-Spam Scanning for this
Policy” from “Use Default Settings” to “Use Anti-Spam service.”
Policy” from “Use Default Settings” to “Use Anti-Spam service.”
Choosing “Use Anti-Spam service” here allows you to override the settings defined in the default
policy.
policy.
Step 3
In the “Positively-Identified Spam Settings” section, change the “Apply This Action to Message” to
“Drop.”
“Drop.”
Step 4
In the “Suspected Spam Settings” section, click Yes to enable suspected spam scanning.
Step 5
In the “Suspected Spam Settings” section, change the “Apply This Action to Message” to “Spam
Quarantine.”
Quarantine.”
Note
Selecting the Spam quarantine forwards mail according to the settings defined in the Spam
Quarantine chapter.
Quarantine chapter.
Step 6
In the “Add text to subject” field, click None.
Messages delivered to the Spam quarantine will have no additional subject tagging.
Step 7
In the “Marketing Email Settings” section, click Yes to enable scanning for marketing mail from
legitimate sources.
legitimate sources.
Step 8
In the “Apply This Action to Message” section, select “Spam Quarantine.”
Step 9
Submit and commit your changes.
Not that the shading shows that the policy is using different settings than the default policy.
Figure C-9
Anti-Spam Settings for the Sales Group Policy Changed
At this point, any message that is suspected spam and whose recipient matches the LDAP query defined
for the sales team policy will be delivered to the Spam Quarantine.
for the sales team policy will be delivered to the Spam Quarantine.
To edit the Outbreak Filter settings for the engineering team policy: