http://issues.apache.org/SpamAssassin/show_bug.cgi?id=4892





------- Additional Comments From [EMAIL PROTECTED]  2006-06-02 11:04 -------
(In reply to comment #12)
> The problem is not the word Oxon by itself. The example contains an address 
that
> has the lines
> Abingdon,
> Oxon.
> OX14 3JF.
> which in HTML look like
> Abingdon,<BR>Oxon.<BR>OX14 3JF.<BR>
> When the HTML tags are removed to process the text in the body, the string
> Oxon.
> OX14
> is a fuzzy match for 'xanax' in the FUZZY_XPILL_BODY rule. The initial 'O' and
> the final '14' are ignored, as are newlines and spaces, leaving xon.OX as what
> is fuzzily matching with 'xanax'.
> Whether that should be a match I leave for someone with more familiarity with
> the fuzzy match rules to decide now that the problem has been narrowed down.
> I do wonder if <br> should be replaced with a newline and the fuzzy match 
should
> not go across lines, if that is possible with the way we parse out text from 
HTML.

Hi there - thank you for looking into this. I'm sorry I didn't get the email 
regarding your finding because any mail with <BR>Oxon.<BR>OX14 would have got 
spammed! Our spam is deleted you see. Does that mean any business in that 
Oxfordshire postcode sending html mails with their address and abbreviation 
Oxon will get their mailed marked as spam?
Would you be able to let me know when you will have a fix for this please? Or 
is there a work around I can use for now? 
Thank you very much!
Vicky




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