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MessageLabs email scanning service

9 February 2006  

Star Technology Group offers an outsourced virus scanning service, so that incoming email can be examined for viruses before it hits the corporate mail server.

The simplest ideas are sometimes the most effective. MessageLabs, a division of Star Technology Group, may be a case in point.

 
 

Company: MessageLabs (division of Star Technology Group)

Main activity: Email scanning services

Founded: 1995

CEO: Ben White

HQ: Gloucester, UK

Status: Privately held. £35 million in funding in two rounds. Investors include Madison Dearborn Partners and Catalyst Investors.

Revenues: £7 million forecast for the year to 31 July 2002.

Key competitors: Activis, Network Associates, Sophos and Trend Micro

Infoconomy comment: Although early to market with an email scanning service, MessageLabs will face intense competition from Activis and Network Associates. However, its heuristic detection gives it an edge.

www.messagelabs.com

 
 

Recognising that maintaining anti-virus software on every PC that connects to an organisation's network is an awkward, time-consuming business, Star launched an outsourced scanning service in 1999 that examines incoming emails for viruses before they hit the corporate mail server.

The service was an instant hit. By January 2000, Star had set up MessageLabs as a separate business unit that focuses primarily on the anti-virus service, but also offers an increasing range of content filtering services, such as scanning for spam and pornographic images.

Today, MessageLabs has one million end-users on four continents, no doubt attracted by MessageLabs' claim that it has not let one virus slip through its net in almost three years of operation.

It has achieved this feat, says co-founder and marketing director Jos White, by deploying not one, but four anti-virus scanners. Off the shelf, it uses anti-virus software products from McAfee, F-Secure and Cybersoft. This is augmented by Skeptic, an anti-virus engine the company developed in-house.

Skeptic's strength, says White, is its heuristics engine. This is a technology for examining incoming email attachments and assessing their ability to do harm to an end-user's PC, based on a collection of rules, such as whether it contains Visual Basic Script or needs to access the user's email address book – both common signs of nefarious intent.

Using heuristics technology, Message-Labs can block viruses before traditional anti-virus software vendors have identified new viruses and issued a 'signature' to enable their software to identify them.

However, it will need to move fast to consolidate its position. Anti-virus software vendors have not only started to add heuristic capabilities to their software, but are also starting to offer managed email filtering services themselves.


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