on Fri, Oct 03, 2003 at 09:16:28AM -0500, W. Paul Mills ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: > On Fri, 03 Oct 2003 10:23:43 +0000, Mark Maas wrote: > > > All, > > > > I installed the following: > > > > Exim 3.35, Amavis, spamassassin, razor and clam-av. > > > > Amavis scans incoming and outgoing emails, and therefore also get passed > > on to Spamassassin for checking as wel. > > > > Receently though spamassassin thinks i'm a spammer as well: > > Unsolicited bulk email from: > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > Subject: SPAM [EMAIL PROTECTED]: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: > > vate Your Reunion.com Account Today!!] > > > > According to the 'Received:' trace, the message originated at: > > mark > > > > The message WILL BE delivered to: > > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > > > The message has been quarantined as: > > > > /var/lib/amavis/virusmails/spam-9a81e2098af61b2e4a1ce70af22a5fc8-20031003-103400-27759-07.gz > > > > Why? Well i've got a exim forward filter file, and when an email comes in > > with ****SPAM**** in the subject it gets send to spamcop for reporting. > > That report email is seen by spamassassin as spam as well. > > > > How do I tell spamassassin that email originating from local accounts > > (root, mark, etc) are by default never spam?
> "whitelist_from menem.mine.nu" in /etc/spamassassin/local.cf or > ~/.spamassassin/user_prefs This will, however, whitelist incoming mail as well. A common tactic for spammer is to forge/spoof an address in your own domain. Wouldn't the right thing to do be having separate (not sure what the exim4 terminology is) routers/forwarders which handle incoming mail and outgoing deliveries separately, or possibly with different SA rulesets? Whitelisting yourself might be another useful trick. Peace. -- Karsten M. Self <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> http://kmself.home.netcom.com/ What Part of "Gestalt" don't you understand? For God so loved the world, that he threatens to torture you forever if you make the wrong guess, based on conflicting, ambiguous, and unconfirmable data.
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