Spam has finally hit me

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Jonathan
    Senior Member
    • Mar 2004
    • 1229

    #1

    Spam has finally hit me

    Well I'm finally getting spam; problem is, its so bad that
    it causes Thunderbird to use a good deal of CPU for me.

    Avast and AVG both have (and work) email plugins,
    but besides Mailwasher Pro, any suggestions on any
    Windows spam filters? some sort of smtp proxy? etc.

    The biggest problem is, it comes across many
    accounts, not all of which are here @ dathorn.
    "How can someone be so distracted yet so focused?"
    - C
  • Jonathan
    Senior Member
    • Mar 2004
    • 1229

    #2
    Something that seems to be working excellent now is SpamPal (add .ORG)
    It took some time to work out multiable mail servers, but found the answer HERE.

    Also it has some (though a few are very brief / not 100% helpful)
    tutorials on how to config it with your antivirus software HERE.
    "How can someone be so distracted yet so focused?"
    - C

    Comment

    • sdjl
      Senior Member
      • Mar 2004
      • 502

      #3
      I personally recommend POPfile: http://popfile.sourceforge.net

      My installed copy is going strong on 6 mail boxes. It relies on your email program to read custom headers so at the end of the day you can port it to any piece of software.
      Well worth looking at

      David
      -----
      Do you fear the obsolescence of the metanarrative apparatus of legitimation?

      Comment

      • Jonathan
        Senior Member
        • Mar 2004
        • 1229

        #4
        SpamPal works simular, injecting a header and, if spam, also **SPAM**
        in the subject line as well, so there's two ways of catching it.

        So far its working pretty good, but I might see
        about turning it off to try POPFile. Looks pretty good
        "How can someone be so distracted yet so focused?"
        - C

        Comment

        • sdjl
          Senior Member
          • Mar 2004
          • 502

          #5
          Ah yes, you can also setup subject modification with POPfile, however i dislike that feature

          David
          -----
          Do you fear the obsolescence of the metanarrative apparatus of legitimation?

          Comment

          • ChrisTech
            Senior Member
            • Mar 2004
            • 530

            #6
            Originally posted by Jonathan
            Something that seems to be working excellent now is SpamPal (add .ORG)
            It took some time to work out multiable mail servers, but found the answer HERE.

            Also it has some (though a few are very brief / not 100% helpful)
            tutorials on how to config it with your antivirus software HERE.

            That's what my bosses like here @ work. I quit using it approx. 9 months ago due to it not catching very many of the spam emails. I havent tried it since, and I only use webmail now @ work. I guess I need to go back to using OE here, and put spampal back on.
            Hosting at Dathorn since March 2003!

            My Interwebs speed on Charter Cable!

            Comment

            • Pedja
              Senior Member
              • Mar 2004
              • 329

              #7
              Tryout MailWasher. I find it most advanced approach to spam filtering.

              Comment

              • ChrisTech
                Senior Member
                • Mar 2004
                • 530

                #8
                Originally posted by Pedja
                Tryout MailWasher. I find it most advanced approach to spam filtering.
                I found MailWasher too helpless. Teaching it is an ongoing process. You still have to screen the emails before you recieve them. That's just as painful as actually deleting them from your inbox, unless the program has changed in the past 6 months or so.
                Hosting at Dathorn since March 2003!

                My Interwebs speed on Charter Cable!

                Comment

                • Frank Hagan
                  Senior Member
                  • Mar 2004
                  • 724

                  #9
                  Originally posted by ChrisTech
                  I found MailWasher too helpless. Teaching it is an ongoing process. You still have to screen the emails before you recieve them. That's just as painful as actually deleting them from your inbox, unless the program has changed in the past 6 months or so.
                  I'm on dial-up at home, so I like the idea of deleting them from the server before downloading. So in that respect, I like Mailwasher.

                  The Pro version now has an on-line database it can check for "known spam" so it can flag it to be deleted. Spam messages that get through without being flagged by SpamCop, your own blacklist, etc., are submitted by users of MailWasher Pro, verified as spam by the admins, and then a checksum is generated for the database. The program compares that checksum to each incoming message to provide an extra "layer" of spam detection.

                  My problem with all spam methods is the possibility of a false positive, leading to deleting valid email. So I like to see the headers of the 200 or so emails taht get past my ISPs server-side spam checker. But on a dialup connection, I don't want to actually download the picture of what the spammers are offering to make larger before I delete the email!

                  Comment

                  • Jonathan
                    Senior Member
                    • Mar 2004
                    • 1229

                    #10
                    I thought Mailwasher only came in "Pro"?
                    So far SpamPal works like a charm

                    I'm trying to configure the AVG email plugin
                    to work with it, so it goes something like
                    Internet -> SpamPal -> AVG -> Thunderbird.

                    Got to love it, both Spam and Virus/Malicious scanning
                    "How can someone be so distracted yet so focused?"
                    - C

                    Comment

                    • felipe808
                      Senior Member
                      • Mar 2004
                      • 111

                      #11
                      keir.net & K9

                      Robin keir's K9 is pretty easy to set up and pretty good. you need a bunch of bad emails to train it fast. It's small, fast and robust. It give me about 99% blocks with >1% false-positives. It has a quick review screen where you can change the false-poss.

                      Comment

                      Working...