On Fri, Oct 24, 2003 at 06:47:22AM +0100, Karsten M. Self said > on Fri, Oct 24, 2003 at 03:43:46AM +1000, Rob Weir ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: > > > This is a good point, but it's not something I notice anymore. I scan > > through my lists and hit "y" on any spam in mutt; it passes the mail to > > "sa-learn --spam" and moves it to my spam folder. About the only thing > > I see anymore in the Debian lists are CJK spam, so subjects like > > ???????????????????????????????????? activate my "y"-reflex. > > There's a good procmail rule to catch the CJK charactersets. > > Hrm. Original source is gone. See: > > http://kmself.home.netcom.com/Download/chinese-charset.procmail
Excellent, thanks. > > I'm considering some further measure to bind to my magic "y"-key. > > Rather than tossing stuff straight at sa-learn, I just bin it to a > folder over which sa-learn runs on a cron schedule. Keeps instant load > down, and still gets pretty good coverage. That's a good idea. > > Reporting to spamcop was high on the list, but I've heard rumours of > > them accepting payoffs in exchange for ignoring some spamhauses, so we > > shall see. > > *Really* ? > > Details? Just rumours, unfortunately. Like any good rumour, there is no corroborating evidence. -- Rob Weir <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> | [EMAIL PROTECTED] | Do I look like I want a CC? Words of the day: Lon Horiuchi Rumsfield blackjack assassinate CIDA
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