mouss wrote:
Sorry for being dumb, but what are FPs?
False Positive. in spam filtering context, an FP is when your filter
mis-classifies a legitimate message as spam.
It's also beneficial for true positives (semantic argument about what
constitutes a "false" positive avoided). If you're the
On Thu, December 18, 2008 10:20, mouss wrote:
> 'postconf -n' will tell you which map types your postfix supports.
> but dovecot-auth is not one of them.
postconf -n shows non defaults config in main.cf
postconf -m shows witch maps are supported
postconf -a shows what auth types is supported by
KLaM Postmaster a écrit :
> mouss wrote:
>> some uses of header and body checks:
>> - reject "banned attachments"
>> - detect forged Received headers
>> - detect some backscatter (see the BACKSCATTER README)
> I gather that all of these are well described in the BACKSCATTER README, are
> there any
On Thu, 18 Dec 2008, mouss wrote:
use zen before spamcop. you will then probably realize that spamcop
doesn't catch enough spam thatis not caught by zen.
Very true. We have a datafeed from Spamhaus and out of roughly five
million connections every 24 hours, bl.spamcop.net rejects about 6,000
mouss wrote:
some uses of header and body checks:
- reject "banned attachments"
- detect forged Received headers
- detect some backscatter (see the BACKSCATTER README)
I gather that all of these are well described in the BACKSCATTER README, are there any other sources that might be worth a
KLaM Postmaster a écrit :
> First of all let me apologize if you have seen this "request/query"
> before. I originally posted this to Google Groups
> "mailing.postfix.users", but felt that that it was probably the wrong
> place to ask for advice. I then tried the Postfix oriented groups on my
> n
First of all let me apologize if you have seen this "request/query"
before. I originally posted this to Google Groups
"mailing.postfix.users", but felt that that it was probably the wrong
place to ask for advice. I then tried the Postfix oriented groups on my
news service, only to realize that th