On Fri, Feb 08, 2002 at 08:12:13AM -0800, Craig Dickson wrote: > begin stan quotation: > > > I've been usnig it for 5+ years, and I really don't have that problem. > > Do you have proper procmail recipies for all you mailing lists? > > Not all of them, intentionally,because some lists (such as debian-user) > receive spam, and I want that filtered out. > > > What sorst of messges are you getting "false postives" on? What's > > SpamBouncer doing with them? Blocj folder? > > Block folder, yes. It's quite a mix. Some people send mail to lists with > a Big5 or other foreign language indicated in the headers even though > the message is actually in English (sheer sloppiness on their part), and > those get blocked. Also, some of the IP matching for "rogue sites" and > "habitual spammers" catches people it shouldn't. Almost anything from > Australia gets nailed by the "Telstra block" rule, for example. > > I also find that without pattern matching enabled, a lot of spam gets > through, but pattern matching also catches a lot of things it shouldn't. > Once, someone mentioned buy.com in a message, and SpamBlocker > immediately flagged it as spam. I've been trying to adjust the initial > scores for some of the patterns to make them behave better, and that's > improved things, but it's still not perfect, and I doubt it ever will > be.
Fair enough. I _do_ have all my lists sorted out prior to calling the main routines, and that works pretty well. OK, so some the lists do recieve spam, but I read the lists in mutt with threading turned on, so they really stick out like sore thumbs, and I never look at them. I susgest you try seting it up that way. Works _great_ for me. -- "They that would give up essential liberty for temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety." -- Benjamin Franklin