Information Security Analyst at a energy/utilities company with 501-1,000 employees
Real User
2019-04-24T17:59:00Z
Apr 24, 2019
We like the in-built features, like the email filtering based on the IP and domain. Cisco has its own blacklisted domains and IPs, which is very good. This filters around 70 percent of emails from spam, and we are seeing fewer false positives with this.
Regional ICT Security Officer EMEA at a engineering company with 10,001+ employees
Real User
2019-04-22T09:21:00Z
Apr 22, 2019
Initially, the most valuable feature for us was the SenderBase Reputation, because that reduced the number of emails that were even considered by the system by a huge number...
Information Security Analyst at a healthcare company
Real User
2019-04-18T09:59:00Z
Apr 18, 2019
It has the IMS engine, Intelligent Multi-Scan engine, and it does a good job, right out-of-the-box, of blocking the vast majority of things that should be blocked.
There were detailed logs available. That was a seriously good feature... It turns out these were actually spoof emails that came into our environment. I got to know about them from the log system.
Network Security Engineer at Konga Online Shopping Ltd
Real User
2019-04-11T10:04:00Z
Apr 11, 2019
Users were able to do a check by themselves on quarantined emails. They could check if a valid email had been stopped, if it matched up with the SPF certification.
Network Security Engineer at a tech services company with 11-50 employees
Consultant
2019-04-11T10:03:00Z
Apr 11, 2019
The user interface was quite friendly, it was quite easy to use, unlike some other Cisco products. Anybody could use it. You don't have to be familiar with IT to be able to handle navigating it.
Cisco Secure Email ensures email traffic security, acting as a checkpoint before emails enter environments like Office 365. It filters out spam, phishing attempts, and malicious content, scanning emails for threats. It offers both inbound and outbound email security with features like URL filtering, spam filtering, and encryption.
Cisco Secure Email functions as an email gateway in cloud, on-premise, and hybrid deployments. Offering capabilities such as Advanced Malware Protection, URL...
The most valuable features are Advanced Malware Protection, URL filtering, and of course Reputation Filtering.
The most valuable feature is the different content filters we are using, such as DKIM.
We like the in-built features, like the email filtering based on the IP and domain. Cisco has its own blacklisted domains and IPs, which is very good. This filters around 70 percent of emails from spam, and we are seeing fewer false positives with this.
Initially, the most valuable feature for us was the SenderBase Reputation, because that reduced the number of emails that were even considered by the system by a huge number...
It has the IMS engine, Intelligent Multi-Scan engine, and it does a good job, right out-of-the-box, of blocking the vast majority of things that should be blocked.
Anti-Spam and Advanced Malware Protection are the most valuable features... and we also have the option to block Zero-day attacks.
There were detailed logs available. That was a seriously good feature... It turns out these were actually spoof emails that came into our environment. I got to know about them from the log system.
Users were able to do a check by themselves on quarantined emails. They could check if a valid email had been stopped, if it matched up with the SPF certification.
The user interface was quite friendly, it was quite easy to use, unlike some other Cisco products. Anybody could use it. You don't have to be familiar with IT to be able to handle navigating it.
The most valuable features are protection against ransomware and spam.
It blocks bulk marketing messages, graymail, spam,
and provides advanced malware protection.
I can customize the configuration and policies.
It integrates with Active Directory and we can limit specific users to using specific applications.
Because we scan products, and there is a lot of critical data, security is very important in these cases.
At one point, there was a zero-day attack. The Cisco appliance detected it and stopped it, helping us out. We avoided the attack and potential damage.