Sorry about that, it (normally) only lets you define which domains are spam.> That's called a "Sender Blacklist". More information about how to set it > up is in the manual at http://www.declude.com/JunkMail/manual.htm in the > "Your own sender blacklists" section.Will the "Sender Blacklist" feature of Declude.JunkMail really let me define domains which are NOT spam and let them pass through? Or does it only allow me to block domains?
Power users sometimes use the blacklist to add a negative weight to certain domains, making it less likely that they will be considered spam, while still catching blatant spam from those domains. But, that's probably not something you need to worry about.
Yes -- whitelisting will accomplish that. To whitelist the return address of an E-mail, you can use:If it only allows me to block is there another feature which allows pass-through?
WHITELIST FROM [EMAIL PROTECTED]
or
WHITELIST FROM @example.com
Note that these whitelist based on the return address of the E-mail (from the SMTP envelope; you can find it in the X-Declude-Sender: header or the IMail SMTP log file in the "MAIL FROM:" line), which is sometimes different than the From: or Reply-To: headers.
No.Am I correct that any tests which I comment out in $default.junkmail$ (with a '#') would no longer be included when weighing incoming e-mail?
In order for them not to be counted towards the weight, you would need to comment them out in the global.cfg file.
-Scott
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