I collect spam this way, periodically I scan the mail logs looking for
"unknown user" entries and sort the results - usernames/email addresses
that are repeatedly being "guessed" get an alias entry added that
forwards the spam to a spam mailbox. I have about 20 of these now that
are aliased
On 09 Oct 2014, at 18:35 , LuKreme wrote:
> No, that is not what it says.
>
> $ man 1 bash
> …
> The control operators && and || denote AND lists and OR lists,
> respectively. An AND list has the form
Sorry for duplicating other’s posts, I replied to the original message out of
the “replie
> On 08 Oct 2014, at 16:23 , Duane Hill wrote:
>
> On Wednesday, October 8, 2014, 3:11:06 PM, LuKreme wrote:
>
>>> On 08 Oct 2014, at 04:56 , Duane Hill wrote:
>>>
>>> On Tuesday, October 7, 2014, 10:56:54 PM, LuKreme wrote:
>>>
On 07 Oct 2014, at 11:45 , Jari Fredrisson wrote:
> I
On Thu, Oct 9, 2014 at 4:14 PM, John Hardin wrote:
> On Thu, 9 Oct 2014, John Traweek CCNA, Sec+ wrote:
>
> I've built a gateway server using sa-exim to filter email for our
>>
>
> This topic comes up fairly regularly. Did you search the list archives on
> terms like "exchange bayes" ?
>
Since
On Thu, 9 Oct 2014, John Traweek CCNA, Sec+ wrote:
I've built a gateway server using sa-exim to filter email for our
corporate Microsoft Exchange environment. It's working pretty good, but
I have Bayes turned off due to the fact that I am unsure on how to train
it in this type of environment.
Am 09.10.2014 um 21:43 schrieb John Traweek CCNA, Sec+:
I’ve built a gateway server using sa-exim to filter email for our
corporate Microsoft Exchange environment. It’s working pretty good, but
I have Bayes turned off due to the fact that I am unsure on how to train
it in this type of environme
I've built a gateway server using sa-exim to filter email for our
corporate Microsoft Exchange environment. It's working pretty good, but
I have Bayes turned off due to the fact that I am unsure on how to train
it in this type of environment. Has someone written a how to article on
how to efficie
Wanted to send an update. After successfully getting Bayes to read through
hand-sorted SPAM and HAM, as well as getting URIBL working, it appears
spamassassin is working MUCH, MUCH better. For example, compare the original:
(http://i.imgur.com/CRzX9Mu.jpg) to the SPAM I've received today:
(http
On 10/9/2014 9:40 AM, Axb wrote:
On 10/09/2014 03:30 PM, Bowie Bailey wrote:
On 10/8/2014 5:03 PM, Axb wrote:
On 10/08/2014 10:48 PM, Robert A. Ober wrote:
On 9/22/14 4:20 PM, RW wrote:
On Mon, 22 Sep 2014 15:11:44 -0500
Robert A. Ober wrote:
*Yes, my test messages and SPAM hit the rules
On 10/09/2014 03:30 PM, Bowie Bailey wrote:
On 10/8/2014 5:03 PM, Axb wrote:
On 10/08/2014 10:48 PM, Robert A. Ober wrote:
On 9/22/14 4:20 PM, RW wrote:
On Mon, 22 Sep 2014 15:11:44 -0500
Robert A. Ober wrote:
*Yes, my test messages and SPAM hit the rules but ignore the score.*
What score
On 10/8/2014 5:03 PM, Axb wrote:
On 10/08/2014 10:48 PM, Robert A. Ober wrote:
On 9/22/14 4:20 PM, RW wrote:
On Mon, 22 Sep 2014 15:11:44 -0500
Robert A. Ober wrote:
*Yes, my test messages and SPAM hit the rules but ignore the score.*
What score does it have?
Could it be that the score go
On Thu, 2014-10-09 at 18:08 +0700, Olivier Nicole wrote:
> But you don't do a -lint before restarting SA: if an update was to break
> SA (like a big Perl syntax error in a rule, or you are working on a
> plugin on your production system, you feel safe because as long as you
> don't restart spamd, a
Martin,
> I do something similar on my SA rules development system (I also have SA
> installed on this laptop but it is normally not running, which has the
> side effect of disabling the standard Fedora sa-update cron job because
> this won't run sa-update if it can't find the spamd daemon). My mo
On Thu, 2014-10-09 at 11:50 +0700, Olivier Nicole wrote:
> Hi,
>
> > /usr/local/bin/sa-update && /usr/local/bin/sa-compile &&
> > /usr/local/etc/rc.d/sa-spamd restart
> >
> > the only time spamd would restart is if sa-update AND sa-compile were
> > successfully completed, correct?
>
Yes, tha
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