Microsoft KB Archive/111536

= PC Gen: Microsoft Mail and Virus Security =

Article ID: 111536

Article Last Modified on 10/30/2006

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APPLIES TO


 * Microsoft Mail for PC Networks 3.0
 * Microsoft Mail for PC Networks 3.0a
 * Microsoft Mail for PC Networks 3.0b
 * Microsoft Mail for PC Networks 3.2

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This article was previously published under Q111536



The importance of data security and protecting against virus infection is of paramount importance to any user or network administrator. Viruses are a real threat to the integrity of data. However, with some forethought and care, users can easily protect their computers and data from infection.

What Is a Virus?
A virus may fall into any one of several different classes: Trojan Horse, worm, boot-sector infector, or others. Some viruses infect existing programs to alter their behavior, others actively destroy data, while some perform actions to storage devices that render their stored data inaccessible. All have one distinct common trait: a virus is a section of code that, like any other program, cannot perform its function until executed. This trait is important to keep in mind when preparing to install virus safeguards.

Can a Virus Be Transmitted Through a Mail Message?
First, an overview of the Microsoft Mail messaging system is in order. When a user creates a Mail message, the Mail system creates a passive (non- executing) data file. This file is also encrypted to ensure the security of the Mail system, thus guarding against "hacking" to get at a message[ASCII 146]s contents. The message is secure from the time it is transmitted until the receiver deletes it. An attachment to this message, which can be any legitimate MS-DOS file, is handled in much the same manner. In summary, a Mail message[ASCII 146]s contents and its attachments are secure from the system within an "envelope" created by the Mail system. While in this state, the data is inaccessible by the system and other users.

Because of this secure envelope, an embedded snippet of virus code cannot be unleashed during transit of the message. In addition, since the message is a non-executing file, even if the code for a virus were inserted, it would just be data and thus non-functional. When a user receives a message and reads it using the Macintosh, MS-DOS, or Windows client, the executing file performing the operation works independently of the message it is reading, which is read in as pure data. If virus code is present within the message, it is still benign because it is not being executed, only read. Because of this, the Mail messaging system itself is safe from being an active vehicle of virus infection.

What About Attachments?
Attachments to mail messages, on the other hand, can be in a wide variety of formats, from Excel spreadsheets to graphics files to executable programs. Any file that can be referenced as a valid MS-DOS file can be an attachment.

This does raise the possibility of virus infection being sent through the Mail system and is where the user[ASCII 146]s own virus protection plans become important.

Microsoft Mail[ASCII 146]s manner of dealing with an attachment is similar to that of a message: a header is created, identifying the file as an attachment with data necessary for it to be identified by the message within the database structure. The attachment itself is encrypted, just like the message, to ensure the security of the messaging system.

The receiver of the message with the attachment will be notified in different ways that the attachment exists, depending upon the client being run. On all three platforms, however, the notification itself only points to the attachment, so an embedded virus is still non-executing. On both the MS-DOS and Macintosh Mail clients, an attachment must be saved as a file to disk before its contents can be viewed or acted upon. On these two platforms, once the attachment is saved, whatever virus protection scheme is already in place by the user is appropriate.

The Windows client, on the other hand, allows a user to launch the attachment directly from within the Mail client. If it is an Excel spreadsheet, Excel is started and the spreadsheet opened; any other non- executable attachment that has an association within Windows will start the associated application and open the attachment as a file within the application. These types of files, even if they have a virus embedded, are still just data being read by a program. In the case of applications where macro programming is available (Excel and Word, for example), it is possible for a document to contain a macro that is in itself malicious.

If, however, an infected executable file (files that end with .EXE or .COM) is launched from the client, the virus is activated and the machine will be infected. On the other hand, if an executable file sent as an attachment is saved to disk first as a file, whatever virus protection scheme is already in place by the user is appropriate.



SUMMARY
The Microsoft Mail messaging system is used to transfer messages and data between users on a network. Due to the nature of the security enhancements in place within the package, data in transit is secure from the system and from other users, preventing tampering. Once the recipient of the message receives the data, whatever virus security procedures are already in place by the user are appropriate for detection. In the context of virus disbursal, a message with an attachment can be viewed as no different than receiving a disk of data from another user.

Additional query words: 3.00 3.00a 3.00b 3.20

Keywords: KB111536

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