News & Stories

Enforce your right – with NetCleanse

You have the right to receive SPAM! That could be the conclusion of the jurists according to a current article on www.heute.de. Many e-mail service providers offer their customers to keep their mailboxes clean from unwanted e-mails. But the question is: How can the provider know what is SPAM to the customer and what is an important message? The answer is easy: He cannot know that! Because what is SPAM to one customer could be corporately important information to you.

SPAM protection – just right for you!

Why should you rely on the preliminary filtering of providers if you found a filtering solution in NetCleanse that provides individual blacklists and many other filtering technologies? Filters that you control yourself! The preliminary filtering is often made by public blacklists. Lists with blocked IP-addresses from which SPAM has been sent.

Did you know that often computers of unknowing users are misused to send thousands of SPAM mails over their internet connections? The result: The IP-addresses of the unknowing users end up on a blacklist in no time. If the user now send an e-mail over his server it will be blocked by the providers' blacklists.

Compliant with your contract?

Why users should be unsettled additionally: A central blockade from the providers isn't really unproblematic legally. In the contract the provider assures to deliver every e-mail. Also those which has been identified as SPAM. That is different and better with NetCleanse: All e-mails send to your domain are accepted by NetCleanse and then examined of virus infection and SPAM contents.

According to the principle “the good into the pot, the bad into the crop” clean e-mails are directly delivered and all as infected filtered e-mails are deferred into a separate SPAM archive. So that you have absolute control of all e-mails you receive a listing of all filtered e-mails with the option to approve them subsequently for your mailbox. That way you may rest assured that you don't miss anything – with NetCleanse.

Used graphical material: © Gerd Altmann / PIXELIO

<- Back to: News & Stories