"Zip-of-death"
               describes a subterfuge designed to bring down a network by overwhelming the
               antivirus software and/or network traffic checking security applications. 
            
 
            Using special techniques, a hacker can compress a file down to
               as little as 500 KB, that, when decompressed, may reach 15 GB or
               more in size. Another version of the exploit involves compressing
               such a large number of files, that, when decompressed, it can crash
               the system.
            
            ScanMail allows
               you to set limits on the size, as well as the number of files it will
               extract from a compressed archive. When the limit is reached, ScanMail stops decompressing
               and takes the action specified for files outside of the scan restriction
               criteria.