March 12, 2004

Office XP update interferes with spam filters

Users complain of security warnings popping up with each e-mail message received

Microsoft Corp.'s latest set of updates for Office XP is causing headaches for users of two junk mail filtering products.

After installing Office XP Service Pack 3 (SP3), users of Sunbelt Software Inc.'s iHateSpam and Cloudmark Inc.'s SpamNet are complaining about security warnings popping up with each e-mail message they receive, according to reports Thursday on the Windows NTBugtraq mailing list.

Both Sunbelt and Cloudmark acknowledge the problem and have posted support bulletins on their Web sites. Sunbelt has released an update to its software to fix the problem while Cloudmark states it is working with Microsoft to solve the issue.

Office XP SP3 was released on Tuesday and contains security enhancements for the Office suite in addition to stability and performance improvements, according to Microsoft's Web site.

After installing SP3, each e-mail received triggers a dialog alerting the user that a program is trying to access e-mail addresses stored in Outlook and warning that this could be related to a computer virus. There is no indication of what program is accessing Outlook, according to the NTBugtraq posting.

Microsoft is investigating the issue, a spokesman said late Thursday.

Cloudmark received complaints from a handful of its customers and hopes to fix the problem soon, said spokeswoman Tricia Fahey.

"The people we have heard from have been consumers who use the desktop product. We are working internally and with Microsoft to resolve the problem before SP3 is widely deployed," she said.

Cloudmark's SpamNet is used by consumers and enterprise users. Customers include the New York City Department of Education, Honeywell International Inc., Virgin Entertainment Group Inc. and Bertelsmann AG, Fahey said.

It is possible that enterprise customers have not discovered the problem yet because they have yet to install the Office update, she said. Typically large organizations perform regression tests on any software update to make sure it does not cause any problems on their systems.

Other applications may also be affected by the Office update, but no information about that was available at press time.

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