If your Whitelist score is -100, and your threshold is -80, you won't need a
blacklist.

Dan

-----Original Message-----
From: Maillinglisten [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, December 06, 2004 10:01 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; users@spamassassin.apache.org
Subject: AW: Whitelist blacklist


hi,

the default values are

% grep -i user_in_whitelist /usr/share/spamassassin/50_scores.cf
score USER_IN_WHITELIST -100.000
score USER_IN_WHITELIST_TO -6.000
% grep -i user_in_blacklist /usr/share/spamassassin/50_scores.cf
score USER_IN_BLACKLIST 100.000
score USER_IN_BLACKLIST_TO 10.000

blacklist and whitelist and all other rules don't have "priorities". They
have rules and if they match, their points are calculated. At the end your
mail is spam or not. Try rtfm. I don't think that the pattern "*.*" will
match "all addresses", but I'm not sure, but I also think that it is not a
very brilliant idea, because ur fuckin up your whole
blacklist/whitelist-functionallity. Maybe you should create some rules which
fit your needs.

hth
-fe


> Hello,
>    I would like to filter out ALL mail that doesn't come from certain
> people. Can I use   *.*   as my Blacklist AND put names in my white list.
> In other words, what has the higher priority, the blacklist or the white
> list.
> Thanks
> Mike


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