Overview
Fight back and save money with these expert tips
Find out what spam and spyware cost your company, and how to stop them
Whether yours is a one-person business or a multi-million dollar corporation, here's help giving spammers and spies the bum's rush. Two veterans of the spam wars help you analyze your situation, choose the right solutions, set up and maintain them, and even show the bean-counters why such defenses are essential.
Discover how to
* Understand how spammers get addresses
* Calculate the cost of spam and spyware
* Re-engineer your business processes
* Select spam and spyware filters
* Manage implementation and maintenance
Synopsis
Fight back and save money with these expert tips
Find out what spam and spyware cost your company, and how to stop them
Whether yours is a one-person business or a multi-million dollar corporation, here's help giving spammers and spies the bum's rush. Two veterans of the spam wars help you analyze your situation, choose the right solutions, set up and maintain them, and even show the bean-counters why such defenses are essential.
Discover how to
- Understand how spammers get addresses
- Calculate the cost of spam and spyware
- Re-engineer your business processes
- Select spam and spyware filters
- Manage implementation and maintenance
Editorials
From Barnes & Noble
The Barnes & Noble ReviewSpam and spyware are frustrating enough if you’re an individual. But if you’re a company, that’s real money they’re costing you -- and real, serious security and liability risks they’re creating. This book offers a realistic plan for dealing with these problems, one that doesn’t require a Ph.D. to implement.
Security consultants Peter Gregory and Mike Simon help you evaluate your environment and users, and get the problem under control without unnecessary hassle or cost. They cover everything from business processes and cost justification to filtering technologies.
Should you use software, appliances, an ASP, a client-side solution, or what? How will you manage your anti-spam solution once you’ve deployed it? What can you do about Joe Jobs, directory attacks, and other nastiness? Gregory and Simon walk you through your options, help you decide, help you get the job done. Bill Camarda, from the June 2005 Read Only