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The Attachment is file name or extension criteria allows you to create rules that take actions on messages based on the name or the extension of attachments a message contains. If a message contains a compressed attachment, the criteria can further match the name or extension of the files included in the compressed attachment.

Procedure

  1. On the Scanning Criteria tab, click Advanced.
  2. Select the Attachment is file name or extension criteria.
  3. Click the file name or extension link.
    The Attachment File Name or Extension screen appears.
  4. From the drop-down list, select either Selected file names or extensions or Not selected file names or extensions.
  5. If you want to block attachment names by file extension:
    1. Select File extensions potentially dangerous and/or File extensions commonly exchanged at work.
      Note
      Note
      The File extensions potentially dangerous category contains those whose file types commonly act as containers for malware and are not types that are normally exchanged via email in an organization. This list includes extensions such as COM, DLL, and EXE. The commonly exchanged category includes file types that are commonly sent between members of an organization.
      The File extensions commonly exchanged at work category includes the DOC extension used by Microsoft Word documents. These files are often used to propagate VB macro viruses, but they are also often commonly exchanged within organizations.
    2. Click the open arrow buttons to drop-down the lists of standard file extensions.
    3. Select the file extensions for Trend Micro Email Security to trigger on for this rule.
    4. Click the close arrow button to collapse the list.
  6. If you want to block attachments with your own specified names:
    1. Select File names.
    2. Type a file name to block.
      Tip
      Tip
      Make sure the file name matches the full name of your target file, including the extension. For example, to match a file named "abc.doc", specify "abc.doc" or use an asterisk, such as "*.doc"; specifying only "abc" does not work.
      You can use an asterisk (*) as a substitute for any part of a file name.
      The following examples are valid file names:
      • *.docx
      • *.doc*
      • LOVE-LETTER*.vbs
      • LOVE-LETTER-FOR-YOU.TXT.vbs
    3. Click Add.
      The file name is added to the list just below.
    Tip
    Tip
    If there are any names in the list that you want to delete, select them and click Delete.