The email you attacked a couple posts ago shows that you are.  There was
this line in it:
X-Spam-Level:  **************************************************

Kris

-----Original Message-----
From: Antonio DeLaCruz [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, April 28, 2005 6:39 PM
To: martin smith
Cc: Spamassassin
Subject: RE: Blacklists entries not getting blocked

I actually don't know if I'm using the * in the headers.  How do I check
that?


Thanks,

Antonio DeLaCruz


Quoting martin smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:

> M>-----Original Message-----
> M>From: Antonio DeLaCruz [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> M>Sent: 28 April 2005 23:12
> M>To: Pettit, Paul
> M>Cc: users@spamassassin.apache.org
> M>Subject: RE: Blacklists entries not getting blocked
> M>
> M>Attached is a file that contains the header information and
> M>the preview of the message as spamassassin modified it.  From
> M>the body of the e-mail, you can clearly see that it is
> M>looking at my blacklist, it just isn't doing anything with
> M>it.  Well, after ramming my head into the wall to knock some
> M>sense into me, I think that I know why it isn't.  My
> M>.procmailrc file isn't doing anything with it.  Now, that
> M>means to me that spamassassin does nothing more than assign a
> M>score to the e-mail and that proc mail does the actual
> M>filtering and deletion.  So, what it seems to me is that 1)
> M>the black list in the user_prefs file is totally useless
> M>since you could easily put this in your .procmailrc
> M>file:
> M>
> M>:0:
> M>* ^From:*badaddress.com
> M>/dev/null
> M>
> M>or 2) there has to be a way in the .procmailrc file to send
> M>to /dev/null anything that has a score over a certain value.
> M>I'm not finding anything on how to do that, so if you know,
> M>that would be much appreciated.  My only other option is to
> M>take the listings in my blacklist and run them through a perl
> M>script to re-write them to go into my procmailrc file.  But,
> M>something tells me that the processing would take longer if
> M>my mail server had to parse through a huge procmailrc file.
> M>
>
> This will send anything over 15 point to /dev/null, assuming ur using
the *
> in the headers.
>
> :0:
> * ^X-Spam-Level: \*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*
> /dev/null
>



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