On Wed 23 Oct 2013 at 13:27:11 +0100, Brad Rogers wrote: > Be aware though, that if somebody new posts to the thread, you'll see > their messages, and any quote(s) they contain so the thread re-emerges. > Also, blacklisting the people will block their posts to that, and any > other thread, not just those to the thread you were/are trying to quell. > > OTOH, you might consider that a "Good Thing"®. ;-)
I think the OP probably realises that but it as well to spell it out for other readers. A more surgical approach would be to target headers such as References: and In-Reply-To: and filter on one or both of them. I expect this would have its own drawbacks but at least it gets closer to the blacklisting of all participants in a particular thread. The idea is to get the Message-ID of the first post, but ones from subsequent mails should also be useful. My perspective is that of a user of Mutt. Mutt has the abilty to pipe a mail to a script; I think Kmail can also do this. In Mutt: macro index <f4> |/home/brian/extract extract has MID=$(cat - | grep -i ^Message-ID | cut -d"<" -f2 | cut -d">" -f1) What is done with the Message-ID is up to you. Using it in procmail is one idea. However, I collect mail with POP3 and have mailfilter filter mails on the server, so the script also has echo "DENY=\"^References:.*${A}\"" >> /home/brian/.mailfilter/mailfilterrc-refs echo "DENY=\"^In-Reply-To:.*${A}\"" >> /home/brian/.mailfilter/mailfilterrc-refs in it. Pressing F4 in mutt takes a second and the DENY rules delete the mails for the thread you do not want to see when the POP3 server is accessed. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: http://lists.debian.org/20131023142927.ga30...@copernicus.demon.co.uk