https://issues.apache.org/SpamAssassin/show_bug.cgi?id=6315
Adam Katz <[email protected]> changed: What |Removed |Added ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- CC| |[email protected] Summary|New spam type with drugs |Detect spammy words like |promo in envelope From: |drug promos in From: |string |headers --- Comment #2 from Adam Katz <[email protected]> 2010-02-01 15:09:54 UTC --- Okay, let's separate the two bugs. Bug 6315 primarily focuses on spammy text in the From field. Old name: "New spam type with drugs promo in envelope From: string" New name: "Detect spammy words like drug promos in From: headers" Bug 6317 primarily focuses on uri patterns in the From field. Old name: "Enhancement: include sender text in the message body so body and uri tests can scan it" New name: "Enable URI testing in From: headers" That puts half of the scope of bug 6317 into this bug without really affecting this bug's nature. As to this bug, I'm pretty sure Bayes can handle this, as noted in bug 6317, comment 1 since (unless somebody corrects me) it tokenizes the subject and sender items with special prefixes so as to differentiate between them and the body. Therefore, it will be an annoyance at first, but the system will eventually learn that those are spam. Just make sure you're training on those messages. Then again, we seem to find these rules worthwhile in the body (where they're more common anyway), so perhaps this has merit after all. It should certainly be noted that the rules in 20_drugs.cf are *very* specific and quite careful to avoid drugs that are spelled correctly and in decent case. The rule proposed by comment 0 head straight into that trouble. -- Configure bugmail: https://issues.apache.org/SpamAssassin/userprefs.cgi?tab=email ------- You are receiving this mail because: ------- You are the assignee for the bug.
