Cisco Cisco Email Security Appliance C170 Guia Do Utilizador

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Cisco AsyncOS 9.0 for Email User Guide
 
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Example of Mail Policies and Content Filters
Overview of Incoming Mail Policies 
The following example demonstrates the features of mail policies by illustrating the following tasks:
1.
Editing the anti-spam, anti-virus, Outbreak Filter, and Content Filters for the default Incoming Mail 
Policy.
2.
Adding two new policies for different sets of users — the sales organization and the engineering 
organization — and then configuring different email security settings for each. 
3.
Creating three new content filters to be used in the Incoming Mail Overview policy table. 
4.
Editing the policies again to enable the content filters for some groups, but not for others. 
This example is meant to show the power and flexibility with which you can manage different 
recipient-based settings for anti-spam, anti-virus, Outbreak Filter, and Content Filters for mail policies. 
This example assigns these a custom user role called “Policy Administrator” that has mail policy and 
content filters access privileges. For more detailed information about how anti-spam, anti-virus, 
Outbreak filters, and delegated administration work, refer to the chapters following this one:
Accessing Mail Policies
You can access incoming and outgoing mail policies by using the Mail Policies menu.
On brand new systems, if you completed all steps in the system setup wizard and you chose to enable 
Anti-Spam, Sophos or McAfee Anti-Virus, and Outbreak Filters, the Incoming Mail Policies Page will 
resemble 
By default, these settings are enabled for the default Incoming Mail Policy: 
Anti-Spam (if the Spam Quarantine is enabled): Enabled 
Positively-identified spam: quarantine, prepend the message subject
Suspected spam: quarantine, prepend the message subject
Marketing email: scanning not enabled
Anti-Spam (if the Spam Quarantine is not enabled): Enabled