[quote user="TonyB"]
I'm seeing a number of "Excessive Password Failures" messages in my POP log files from several different IP's from this weekend.
Connection from 216.69.162.62, Mon Oct 22 04:57:22 2007
***** User guest - Excessive Password Failures.
1 sec. elapsed, connection closed Mon Oct 22 04:57:23 2007
Anything to be worried about? Could someone actually connect to one of our email accounts if they get the right name and password? I've never tried setting up Mercury for non-local access, but haven't come across info if by default it is.
Running Mercury 32 4.01c
Thanks,
Tony
[/quote]
Yes, they will be able to access the directory of the user account via POP3, they may be able to do more if they have a valid username and password. The amount of worry depends a lot on whether the IP addresses are your local IP addresses. If it is not then you've probably got a hacker trying to guess their way in; if it is it may be a user that forgot their password.
[quote user="TonyB"]<p>I'm seeing a number of&nbsp; "Excessive Password Failures" messages in my POP log files from several different IP's from this weekend.</p>
<p>Connection from 216.69.162.62, Mon Oct 22 04:57:22 2007
***** User guest - Excessive Password Failures.
1 sec. elapsed, connection closed Mon Oct 22 04:57:23 2007</p>
<p>Anything to be worried about? Could someone actually connect to one of our email accounts if they get the right name and password? I've never tried setting up Mercury for non-local access, but haven't come across info if by default it is.
Running Mercury 32 4.01c</p>
<p>Thanks,</p>
<p>Tony</p><p>[/quote]</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>Yes, they will be able to access the directory of the user account via POP3, they may be able to do more if they have a valid username and password.&nbsp; The amount of worry depends a lot on whether the IP addresses are your local IP addresses.&nbsp; If it is not then you've probably got a hacker trying to guess their way in; if it is it may be a user that forgot their password.
</p>