Tag Archives for email-service

MessageLabs upgrades content security services

MessageLabs on Thursday announced upgrades to its content and image control service offerings that feature greater accuracy and can scan more document types for allowable content.

MessageLabs’ Email Content Control 3.0 and Email Image Control 2.0 are offered as managed services that scan inbound and outbound e-mails for inappropriate, confidential or malicious content sent or received by an organization’s employees. The services help companies implement acceptable e-mail use policies and ensure compliance with a range of government and industry regulations, according to company officials.

The upgraded services now feature the ability to scan within Microsoft Office document attachments and include customizable notifications, so that e-mail administrators can change the text within a notification to better fit the organization, they say.

Email Content Control 3.0 also features a reorganized management interface that makes rule details easier to find, and can decompress files for scanning. The service can use the same security policies implemented by a company’s e-mail system, and rules can be set on a user-by-user basis, officials say. Email Image Control 2.0 includes new algorithms for analysing image attributes in order to accurately distinguish inappropriate content, officials say.

“Businesses are increasingly dependent on email as a primary communication tool,” said Michael D. Osterman, President, Osterman Research. “But it presents several risks for controlling confidential and valuable information from leaving the organization. Content filtering — inspecting the content of messages before they are sent — will assume a more important role within messaging management as a means of mitigating risks and managing corporate liability, and to make businesses feel more confident about their email systems.”

you have 24 hours to reply to my email or else…

Recent studies indicate that when customers or potential customers contact an online organisation, 80% prefer communicating by email over phone and over 50% will not do business with a company if they do not receive an adequate response to their email within 24 hours. The average response time to a customer email inquiry is 72 hours.

Most online organisations communicate regularly with customers and clients by email, but few provide a level of email customer service that satisfies their customers. While email service standards are low, the benefits of communicating via email are palpable:

  • Cost – an email conversation generally costs 75% less than a phone conversation.
  • Time – the time it takes to respond to an email is significantly less than a phone call. Email also allows both the customer and your company representative to multi-task, responding to email messages while attending to other matters.
  • History – email allows for the easy tracking and retrieval of email conversations, which ensures accountability and allows for organisational benefits derived from the sharing of customer history and knowledge.

Source: deerfield.com (providers of email management systems)


Other Recent Posts:

  1. Surfing porn can still get you fired - 22nd Jan 2010
  2. 10k inappropriate images found on county council computers - 22nd Jan 2010
  3. ISPs now keep your history for 12 months - 8th Apr 2009
  4. Three Irishmen joke turns into 30 BT Staff... - 24th Feb 2009
  5. Media Interest Increases 15% In Employment Disputes - 24th Feb 2009
  6. Email libel costs £110k for University - 26th Aug 2008
  7. Nearly 50% of UK firms fire abusive emailers - 2nd Jun 2008
  8. Email Compliance and the use of Email Filtering - 31st Dec 2007
  9. Email spam - becoming sound practice! - 7th Nov 2007
  10. Email Security (Encryption) 2007 Review - 2nd Oct 2007
  11. Lost emails cause 5m hours of IT Management time - 25th Sep 2007
  12. Turning your email address into a phone call - 6th Sep 2007
  13. links for 2007-08-21 - 21st Aug 2007
  14. Sitemap - 21st Aug 2007
  15. Trend Micro joins the SaaS team for email protection - 14th Aug 2007