Hi all, first time poster here. Please be gentle. :-)
I've been seeing some new behavior in the past couple weeks that prompts me to seek advice. I've been faithfully using Pegasus since about 1994, always keeping up with the latest versions (using 4.41 now). I use it on two late-model HP desktops, both running Windows XP Pro, always up to date patchwise. The behavior I'm reporting is happening on both machines (one at home, one in the office). About six months ago I switched my AV from Norton corporate client to Bit Defender v. 10. The combination has worked very well, but recently something has started to slip through and I'm not sure why. The details:
I've been getting spam emails containing a virus designated Generic.Peed.eml.XXXXXX where XXXXXX is some randomly-generated alphanumeric. When Pegasus goes out to check for new mail and there is such a message in my server's inbox, Bit Defender duly pops up a box showing its presence and informing me that it did not infect my machine. However, Pegasus then freezes with the offending message listed in my New Mail folder, or at least partially listed-- sometimes only some characters in the subject line field, sometimes just a date/time. I have to kill the winpm-32.exe process in Task Manager to get out of it. After that, relaunching Pegasus shows the error message that the mailbox was locked, only continue if you know there is not another copy running, etc. Proceeding from there puts Pegasus right back in the same freezed-up state, same visible infected message(s) in New Mail. I can fix it by going into Windows Explorer, highlighting C:\PMAIL, and scanning with Bit Defender. It finds the infected file(s) in the ADMIN folder, where it looks like they've been given their encrypted Pegasus file names e.g. PU34PE78.CNM or whatever. I can then quarantine/remove them, and Pegasus fires up normally after that. Until, of course, the next infected emails arrive, then I have to go through this all over again.
I've read a couple threads on here this morning about the order in which Pegasus applies filters, and that the Preview pane cannot be disabled "stickily", i.e. deselecting Preview will not persist when Pegasus is closed and launched again later. I suspect that some subtle interaction of 1) the timing with which Pegasus applies its filtering, 2) that Preview cannot be forced to be off when Pegasus loads, and 3) with which Bit Defender does its incoming-email scan is allowing this to happen. I'm reluctant to abandon Bit Defender, as it has demonstrated its high quality and I paid $$ for it.
Also, I have checked the option to apply incoming filter rules to previewed messages, which I did not have checked before; perhaps that will help.
Hoping someone has some useful insight. Sorry this was so long.
Dave in Albuquerque, NM, USA
Hi all, first time poster here. Please be gentle. :-)
I've been seeing some new behavior in the past couple weeks that prompts me to seek advice. I've been faithfully using Pegasus since about 1994, always keeping up with the latest versions (using 4.41 now). I use it on two late-model HP desktops, both running Windows XP Pro, always up to date patchwise. The behavior I'm reporting is happening on both machines (one at home, one in the office). About six months ago I switched my AV from Norton corporate client to Bit Defender v. 10. The combination has worked very well, but recently something has started to slip through and I'm not sure why. The details:
I've been getting spam emails containing a virus designated Generic.Peed.eml.XXXXXX where XXXXXX is some randomly-generated alphanumeric. When Pegasus goes out to check for new mail and there is such a message in my server's inbox, Bit Defender duly pops up a box showing its presence and informing me that it did not infect my machine. However, Pegasus then freezes with the offending message listed in my New Mail folder, or at least partially listed-- sometimes only some characters in the subject line field, sometimes just a date/time. I have to kill the winpm-32.exe process in Task Manager to get out of it. After that, relaunching Pegasus shows the error message that the mailbox was locked, only continue if you know there is not another copy running, etc. Proceeding from there puts Pegasus right back in the same freezed-up state, same visible infected message(s) in New Mail. I can fix it by going into Windows Explorer, highlighting C:\PMAIL, and scanning with Bit Defender. It finds the infected file(s) in the ADMIN folder, where it looks like they've been given their encrypted Pegasus file names e.g. PU34PE78.CNM or whatever. I can then quarantine/remove them, and Pegasus fires up normally after that. Until, of course, the next infected emails arrive, then I have to go through this all over again.
I've read a couple threads on here this morning about the order in which Pegasus applies filters, and that the Preview pane cannot be disabled "stickily", i.e. deselecting Preview will not persist when Pegasus is closed and launched again later. I suspect that some subtle interaction of 1) the timing with which Pegasus applies its filtering, 2) that Preview cannot be forced to be off when Pegasus loads, and 3) with which Bit Defender does its incoming-email scan is allowing this to happen. I'm reluctant to abandon Bit Defender, as it has demonstrated its high quality and I paid $$ for it.
Also, I have checked the option to apply incoming filter rules to previewed messages, which I did not have checked before; perhaps that will help.
Hoping someone has some useful insight. Sorry this was so long.
Dave in Albuquerque, NM, USA