Fritz,
I am using the defaults (except at the bysian because when I first set 
this up they were a little off, and I had to adjust them) I believe they 
were at 30 low and 50 high. This morning I took the high down to 40 to 
make sure some of the values from the log would be marked.

I'm not wanting anything to get dropped right now, is why I've got 
everything on scoring. Once it starts sticking things in the spam folder 
again, I'll see what the scores are and start turning things to block.

When I was taking another look through the logs, I found an entry like this:
Mar-5-09 00:00:09 [MessageLimit][monitoring] xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx. 
<[email protected]> to: [email protected] monitoring 
(MessageScore 55, limit 50)

As I understand this, this one should've gotten thrown into the spam folder?

On 3/5/2009 10:12 AM, Fritz Borgstedt wrote:
> Questions and Answers for users of ASSP Anti-Spam SMTP Proxy
> <[email protected]>  schreibt:
>> I'm currently taking the testmode check off of all the sections and
>> setting them to score.
>>
>> You think this will stick something in the spam?
>
>
> It is impossible for me to train you via some email.
> I told you already the scoring is low. That means either the default
> limits are too high or the scoring values are too low. Normally the
> defaults are quite good. Setting DNSBL to scoring is unwise. DNSBL is
> a major source of spam for the spam-collection. The same is true for
> URIBL.
> Why are you not going to the defaults.  have all the spam copied to an
> account, look what filters are to sharp and set those filters to
> scoring or testmode which are behaving badly ?
>
>
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-- 
Troy Potter
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(785) 823-8760
[email protected]


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-OSBC tackles the biggest issue in open source: Open Sourcing the Enterprise
-Strategies to boost innovation and cut costs with open source participation
-Receive a $600 discount off the registration fee with the source code: SFAD
http://p.sf.net/sfu/XcvMzF8H
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