Find out how companies and organisations are using ClamAV to solve real world problems.
If your company (or client) has deployed an anti-virus solution based on ClamAV, we'd like to hear about it.
You'll need to provide:
A brief description of the company
The challenge
An overview of the solution
The results of your implementation
Contact information
You can create a page with your company name followed by SuccessStory and add it to the list below.
Once we review your submission, if we find it appropriate, we will list it on our http://www.clamav.net/about/who-use-clamav/ page and your story will receive global visibility!
Success stories
AcmeIncSuccessStory (read this for an example of how a success story should look like!)
Westral - Using ClamAV, we have stopped over 7000 infected, malicious or suspicious emails this year alone.
PERT Consultores SRL - Thanks to ClamAV, there are 15.573.247 less infected emails around here (74100 yesterday). Very low FP rate, and the best reaction time. Keep on the good work.
Museums Online - We've cut the labor required in our email system by over 50% .. mayby more ..
Social Network - Considered it required componant even before launching .. our network of sites for names, genealogy, ancestry and people handles an average of 3000 accounts a day
Cardia AS - We have a chain of 5 AV engines, ClamAV as the first. Only once in 2 years has a virus been caught by any of the others - and we handle ~150k mails/day. Thank you!
Subasta - Free online auction service in Poland. We are scanning about 2500+ accounts per day and we are very satisfied with this solution.
Kos-Med - Health service. We are using ClamAV every day. Most of the infected files which are sending via post never get through ClamAV installed on our Unix server.
WPKG - WPKG is an open source project. We use the following tools to scan all incoming mail (mailing lists, member emails, other mails hosted here): Postfix as a SMTP server, amavisd-new, spamassassin, clamav, postgrey with maRBL for selective greylisting, p0f, and some others. This combination works great. Some good news: the number of infected emails floating in internet is dropping significantly since April 2007.