At 11:04 PM 8/23/2005, you wrote:
Thanks Burton Windle . It's working now. I need
one more information. The suspected spam mails will be
moved to the SPAM file in the user's home directory
instead of going to the user's mailbox. The original
valid mails will be in the location /var/spool/m
From: "Kris Deugau" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Fortunately, it's a little easier to shut them up about spam that slips
through. "Well, Mr Smith, I see that there are 2000 spams in your spam
folder, which at the moment looks like about 100 per day. I think the
filter's working just fine, don't you?"
jdow wrote:
>
> From: "Kris Deugau" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> > No matter how you do it, you *will* get users complaining that:
> > a) you tagged $relative's Really Important (forwarded copy of a
> > fowarded copy of... a joke) Message, or
> > b) you are forcing them to wade through the spam when y
From: "Kris Deugau" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
No matter how you do it, you *will* get users complaining that:
a) you tagged $relative's Really Important (forwarded copy of a fowarded
copy of... a joke) Message, or
b) you are forcing them to wade through the spam when you *promised*
they wouldn't have
suresh kumar wrote:
>
>Thanks Burton Windle . It's working now. I need
> one more information. The suspected spam mails will be
> moved to the SPAM file in the user's home directory
> instead of going to the user's mailbox. The original
> valid mails will be in the location /var/spool/mail
Thanks Burton Windle . It's working now. I need
one more information. The suspected spam mails will be
moved to the SPAM file in the user's home directory
instead of going to the user's mailbox. The original
valid mails will be in the location /var/spool/mail as
in the user's name. We can d