Quote:
"We no longer support POP / IMAP scanning on newer versions.
With regard to the licensing, because we sit at the gateway, it will records anything behind the UT box. If you choose not to use a portion of the product, that is fine, however it will record the number of devices, ip's/emails. Also, If you have POP service that already do virus and spam scanning, then you most likely do not need Spam Blocker. Just keep in mind that it is already included and will not be discounted just because you do not turn it on"
Quote:
NG Firewall products and services are priced by bands for different sized companies and networks. The appropriate band can be calculated by counting the number of unique devices behind NG Firewall on any given day. More explicitly, it is the number of unique IPs on any non-WAN (local) interface including VPN users seen from midnight to midnight the next day. If the number of unique IPs is below the upper bound of the subscription band for that server it is fully compliant.
Note:
Bypassed devices are not counted. Bypass Rules can be added for devices that do not need Untangle scanning and services (printers etc) but still require internet access.
If the number of unique email addresses for scanned emails is greater than the number of unique IPs, unique email addresses is used instead.
So I ask myself how can this apply to me and I ask, I have asked multiple times and can not get a solid answer.
The problem we are facing is our company has an domain for the store front business, a domain for the web business that the storefront employees all have an email for each, we also have a blog site which gives 5 of us a 3rd email box. Emails to Salesman from the past that are kept active to not lose potential sales, dedicated email boxes that are sent a copy of order confirmations sent to customers, and shipping has it's own etc.
I can't get our boxes under 50, I just con't.
Can anyone confirm how the policy handles this CLEARLY?
How it is in anyway reasonable that a service the unit provides is doing nothing because they have decided to stop providing POP support. I think this is a remnant from the old policy that applies when the product ACTUALLY supported POP and I can understand that. I have mentioned several times to the salespeople I have tried to the end of my patience to deal with, to a few tech support people as well that there are still remnants on every feature that provides email protection that they all still say they provide POP protection, but they don't seem any more interested in that than they do in obtaining a sub 50 license count customer I've got a limited IT budget and $2700 vs $1080 is not going to break us but I simply can't spend that money in good faith when there is absolutely no added value being provided to me. If that makes me cheap then so be it.