Re: Bayes DB's

2004-12-06 Thread Daryl C. W. O'Shea
Gray, Richard wrote: Surely that would only happen if there were equal amounts of Spam and ham passing through. Otherwise the token will have a tendency toward whichever the program has seen more of. From: Loren Wilton [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Assuming that the s

RE: Bayes DB's

2004-12-06 Thread Gray, Richard
@spamassassin.apache.orgSubject: Re: Bayes DB's Assuming that the same header values appear in both spam and ham, I'd expect that Bayes would conclude the token was useless for classification and ignore it.           Loren      --- This email from dns has been va

Re: Bayes DB's

2004-12-06 Thread Loren Wilton
onday, December 06, 2004 1:46 AM Subject: Bayes DB's Our mailservers add their name to the received from header of every message. As far as I can see, SA detects this and uses it to create tokens when autolearning.   Because our DB is shown more spam than ham, there are tok

Bayes DB's

2004-12-06 Thread Gray, Richard
Our mailservers add their name to the received from header of every message. As far as I can see, SA detects this and uses it to create tokens when autolearning.   Because our DB is shown more spam than ham, there are tokens in the DBase that identify messages coming from our server as being