I recently tried to send someone @ gmail a rar file as an attachment.
The file was about 10k. It's a small (about 50 kb) xml file. I used
winrar (offhand not sure what version I've got - there's no intuitive
way to see the version). I used the password option and also encrypted
the file name.
Gmail said this:
============
Your message was rejected by gmail-smtp-in.l.google.com for the
following reason:
5.7.0 This message was blocked because its content presents a potential
5.7.0 security issue. Please visit
5.7.0 https://support.google.com/mail/?p=BlockedMessage to review our
5.7.0 message content and attachment content guidelines.
=============
So either
(a) gmail doesn't like password-protected rar files
So either
(a) gmail doesn't like password-protected rar files
It won't allow ANY password protected files (where it can't
see the name/size of each file) and it couldn't care less about your security. It will allow unencrypted malware through, stuff with
multiple hits on Virustotal..
Shadow wrote:
So either
(a) gmail doesn't like password-protected rar files
It won't allow ANY password protected files (where it can't
see the name/size of each file) and it couldn't care less about your security. It will allow unencrypted malware through, stuff with
multiple hits on Virustotal..
I used a hex editor on the rar file and changed the first 2 bytes.
Renamed the file from .rar to something else. Resent the file as
attachment - and this time it went through. The recipient restored the first 2 bytes and unpacked the file normally.
On Thursday, September 27, 2018 at 7:35:08 AM UTC+8, Virus Guy wrote:works to receive the file.
Shadow wrote:
So either
(a) gmail doesn't like password-protected rar files
It won't allow ANY password protected files (where it can't
see the name/size of each file) and it couldn't care less about your
security. It will allow unencrypted malware through, stuff with
multiple hits on Virustotal..
I used a hex editor on the rar file and changed the first 2 bytes.
Renamed the file from .rar to something else. Resent the file as
attachment - and this time it went through. The recipient restored the
first 2 bytes and unpacked the file normally.
You can rename the extension of a password protected file sent to Gmail and it
For a password protected file: MyFile.rar change to to MyFile.rar.ZYX will work.
Z-Zip will open files with unknown extensions by content
"Shadow" wrote:
Z-Zip will open files with unknown extensions by content
So will 7-Zip. Never heard of Z-Zip.
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