Every minute users spend dealing with unsolicited
commercial e-mail (spam) or other unwanted e-mail is a minute they
cannot do their work and deal with other issues. To try to deter
spammers and other senders from whom users don't want to receive
messages, you can use message filtering to block these people from
sending messages to your organization. Not only can you filter messages
that claim to be from a particular sender or that are sent to a
particular receiver, you can also establish connection filtering rules
based on IP block lists. The sections that follow discuss these and
other anti-spam options.
As you configure message filtering, keep in mind that while Exchange
Server 2010 is designed to combat most spammer techniques, no system
can block all of them. Like the techniques of those who create viruses,
the techniques of those who send spam frequently change, and you won't
be able to prevent all unwanted e-mail from going through. You should,
however, be able to substantially reduce the flow of spam into your
organization.
Filtering Spam and Other Unwanted E-Mail by Sender
Sometimes, when you are filtering spam or other unwanted e-mail,
you'll know specific e-mail addresses or e-mail domains from which you
don't want to accept messages. In this case, you can block messages
from these senders or e-mail domains by
configuring sender filtering. Another sender from which you probably
don't want to accept messages is a blank sender. If the sender is
blank, it means the From field of the e-mail message wasn't filled in
and the message is probably from a spammer.
Sender filtering is enabled by default. To configure filtering according to the sender of the message, follow these steps:
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Start the Exchange Management Console. On an Edge Transport server,
select Edge Transport, click the server you want to work with, and then
click the Anti-Spam tab in the details pane. On a Hub Transport server
for which you've enabled spam filtering, expand the Organization
Configuration node, select Hub Transport, and then click the Anti-Spam
tab in the details pane. -
Right-click Sender Filtering, and then select Properties. The Sender Filtering Properties dialog box appears. -
On the Blocked Senders tab (shown in Figure 1), the Senders list box shows the current sender filters, if any.
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You can add a sender filter by clicking Add. In the Add Blocked
Senders dialog box, select Individual E-mail Address if the filter is
for a specific e-mail address, or select Domain if you want to filter
all e-mail sent from a particular domain. Type the e-mail address or
domain name, as appropriate, and then click OK. -
You can remove a filter by selecting it and then clicking Remove. -
To edit a filter, double-click the filter entry, enter a new value, and then click OK. -
On the Blocked Senders tab, you can also filter messages that don't
have an e-mail address in the From field. To do this, select the Block
Messages That Don't Have Sender Information check box. -
On the Action tab, specify how messages from blocked senders are to
be handled. If you want to ensure that Exchange doesn't waste
processing power and other resources dealing with messages from
filtered senders, select the Reject Message option. If you want to mark
messages as being from a blocked sender and continue processing them,
select Stamp Message With Blocked Sender And Continue Processing. Click
OK.
Filtering Spam and Other Unwanted E-Mail by Recipient
In any organization, you'll have users whose e-mail addresses
change, perhaps because they request it, leave the company, or change
office locations. Although you might be able to forward e-mail to these
users for a time, you probably won't want to forward e-mail
indefinitely. At some point, you, or someone else in the organization,
will decide it's time to delete the user's account, mailbox, or both.
If the user is subscribed to mailing lists or other services that
deliver automated e-mail, the automated messages continue to come in,
unless you manually unsubscribe the user or reply to each e-mail that
you don't want to receive the messages. That's a measure that wastes
time, but Exchange administrators often find themselves doing this.
It's much easier to add the old or invalid e-mail address to a
recipient filter list and specify that Exchange shouldn't accept
messages for users who aren't in the Exchange directory. Once you do
this, Exchange won't attempt to deliver messages for filtered or
invalid recipients, and you won't see related nondelivery reports
(NDRs), either.
Recipient filtering is enabled by default. To configure filtering according to the message recipient, follow these steps:
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Start the Exchange Management Console. On an Edge Transport server,
select Edge Transport, click the server you want to work with and then
click the Anti-Spam tab in the details pane. On a Hub Transport server
for which you've enabled spam filtering, expand the Organization
Configuration node, select Hub Transport, and then click the Anti-Spam
tab in the details pane. -
Right-click Recipient Filtering, and then select Properties. The Recipient Filtering Properties dialog box appears. -
On the Blocked Recipients tab (shown in Figure 2), the Recipients list box shows the current recipient filters, if any.
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You can filter messages that are sent to recipients who don't have
e-mail addresses and aren't listed as recipients in your Exchange
organization. To do this, select the Block Messages Sent To Recipients
That Do Not Exist In The Directory check box. -
Before you can add other recipient filters, you must select the
Block Messages Sent To The Following Recipients check box. You can then
add a recipient filter by typing the address you'd like to filter and then clicking Add. Addresses can refer to a specific e-mail address, such as walter@blueyonderairlines.com, or a group of e-mail addresses designated with the wildcard character (*), such as *@blueyonderairlines.com to filter all e-mail addresses from blueyonderairlines.com, or *@*.blueyonderairlines.com, to filter all e-mail addresses from child domains of blueyonderairlines.com. -
You can remove a filter by selecting it and then clicking Remove. -
To edit a filter, double-click the filter entry, enter a new value, and then press Enter. Click OK.
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