On Fri, 17 Aug 2007, Pawe? T?cza wrote:
I did the test and unfortunately my FuzzyOcr (3.5.1) was bitten by that
spam image.
You can manually mark this picture as bad :
# fuzzy-find --delete
# fuzzy-find --learn-spam
Hey,
I'm using FuzzyOCR which works great. However, lately I've been seeing
annoying Outlook users using some kind of plugin which seem to add an
image, and it has the text "Free emoticons, download here" (or something),
mostly it's in my language and then it has the text "gratis".
The word
On Fri, 4 May 2007, Andrzej Adam Filip wrote:
You can use gray-listing to avoid "blind spot" (detection delay) of such
lists to increase their efficiency.
Yes, this is what I will try to archive in the future.
Two standard questions to clear the picture:
a) Do you block dynamic ip addresses
On Fri, 4 May 2007, Matt Kettler wrote:
This apparently is fixed in perl 5.8.8, but still happens in 5.8.6,
5.8.5, etc.
Hm, I have a Slackware 11.0 box with perl 5.8.8 and I'm getting the same
message. This problem also was there already with the previous version of
spamassassin and FuzzyOcr
On Thu, 3 May 2007, Jerry Durand wrote:
All DSL/dialup accounts get a 554 from us (using a couple of RBLs), so
I've actually seen our spam decrease lately.
I've used RBLs too, in the past. However, i've noticed legitimate
mailservers sometimes turn up in such lists so we were "missing" mails,
Hi list,
Not sure if it's entirely on-topic, but at least I want to monitor it
closely.
A while ago I implemented graylisting, which works quite well. But since 2
days ago I'm seeing loads of mails which are passing by the greylisting
(so they are being sent again by a "real" mailserver).
On Wed, 2 May 2007, Henrik Krohns wrote:
I guess this doesn't hurt, but Bayes should already handle it. Most
mails on my server are BAYES_00, since there is practically no spam in
our language.
Well, I don't entirely agree. In theory bayes can handle things ofcourse,
but I have words in my m
Hi,
Although I have some negative-score rules, my ham mails never score too
much below zero. I've set auto learning for ham to -12 to be sure spam
never gets marked as ham and my bayes database doesn't get polluted- i
think it's quite bad if ham mail would be autolearned as spam (i guess
much
On Wed, 28 Mar 2007, Panagiotis Christias wrote:
the last days we get a lot of spam like this:
KAUF-TIPP DER WOCHE
I wrote a few of my own rules especially to catch those stocks scams
together with bayes. If you don't have any people who should write you in
German you can also use the X-Lan
On Tue, 20 Mar 2007, Erik Slooff wrote:
I have an interesting observation on my mail gateway (policyd for
greylisting, postfix, amavisd-new and spamassassin); after implementing
greylisting and other measures such as RBLs there aren't enough spam
messages coming through to keep bayes trained.
Hello,
I'm already using spamassassin with a shared bayes database for quite a
while. As a result, this database is quite well trained for the spam that
I receive and I'm very happy with the results.
Now, I need to install another server (which will serve other domains),
the setup is similar
On Thu, 8 Mar 2007, Jeremy Fairbrass wrote:
I just tested those three rules below, and none of them work with
"www.superveils . com" (ie. having a space both before and after that
dot).
Strange, it matches rule 3 with egrep:
echo 'www.superveils . com' | egrep 'www[\ ]+?\.([a-z0-9\-\ ]?)+\.[
On Thu, 8 Mar 2007, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I searched the list and found this rule to catch URL with single space
(www.ledrx .com). Please help me in modifying this rule to catch URL
with double space (www.superveils . com).
body URL_WITH_SPACE m/\bhttp:\/\/[a-z0-9\-.]+[!*%&, -]+\.?com\b/
Hi List!
I'm getting hit by a bunch of annoying stock scams which aren't found by
any of my sare lists, they keep on scoring low.
So I decided to write a custom rule, which seem to work pretty well for
my case:
body __HILO_STOCKS1 /(High|Low|Curr[e3]nt|Cur(r|\r.|r[e3]nt|\.)\
Price|Pr
On Fri, 2 Mar 2007, Matt Kettler wrote:
You might be able to add a header rule that checks the X-Languages
pseudo header.
Great, this seems to work ! I learned something new, thanks a lot! :-)
K.
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