Just read up at http://www.maiamailguard.com/, but: yes, each and every mail is stored in a database. Ham/Non-virus-mails get delivered at once though, only a copy is getting stored in the db

Dirk
Chr. v. Stuckrad schrieb:
On Tue, 18 Jul 2006, Dirk Bonengel wrote:

...
If I was in your position, I'd try to switch over to a system like Maia Mailguard that keeps a copy of each mail in a database and users can confirm and/or correct the underlying SpamAssassin engine's decisions. This system uses a singel bayes DB....Works fine at a customer of ours that uses some weird proprietary document managing software

THIS looks *very* interesting, as it may directly solve the problems
we planned to solve in our *next* MTA (not postfix, but exim4 + cyrus)
where we already 'test' amavisd-new+clamav+nai-uvscan for filtering and
where we needed acces for the users to the filter-settings.

Does it really keep *every* Mail in the database?
Or only Mail which might be accepted if the user wants it.
(>50% Mail coming in have useless adresses here)

But *now* I'm stuck with qmail+qmail-queue-patch and the older
amavis-perl(largely patched).  So *now* the users have no influence
except 'telling me' [which they mostly do not] :-)

Stucki

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