-------- Original-Nachricht -------- > Datum: Thu, 23 Aug 2007 12:29:22 +0200 > Von: "net-lab Support[Sven Kloe]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > An: [email protected] > Betreff: Re: [dspam-users] wich group to use?
> Am Donnerstag, 23. August 2007 11:07 schrieb [EMAIL PROTECTED]: > > -------- Original-Nachricht -------- > > > > > Datum: Thu, 23 Aug 2007 10:49:38 +0200 > > > Von: Sven Kloe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > > An: DSpam Users <[email protected]> > > > Betreff: Re: [dspam-users] wich group to use? > > > > > > Hi all, > > > > > > I don't know exact wich group should be used in which context. > > > > > > I use dspam with several Domains and many users don't train the > filter. > > > Know I don't know which group combination is preferred. > > > > > > AFAIK there are (plz correct me if I'm wrong): > > > - Global groups - Used for all Accounts until the user trained at > least > > > 200 emails > > > - Merged groups - Adds the "Spam Level" to the users-dictionary > > > - Shared groups- One Dictionary for Multiple email addresses with > > > seperated quarantines > > > - managed shared group - One Dictionary and one Quarantine for > Multiple > > > email addresses > > > > I think you miss the following groups: > > - inoculation > > - classification > > I thought these are only flags to train dspam. > Yes. But they exists as group as well (from the readme): ----------------------------------------------------- INOCULATION An inoculation group allows users to maintain their own private dictionaries with their own spam alias, but all members of the group will inoculate other members with spams they manually forward into their alias. This allows users to report spams to one another and maintain their own private dictionary. Another advantage to this is that users do not necessarily have to share the same email behavior. NOTE: Users should only be added to an inoculation group after their initial learning period, to avoid potential false positives due to lack of data. To create groups, you'll want to create a file with the filename 'group' located in the DSPAM user directory. The default is /usr/local/var/dspam/group. The format of the file should look like this: group1:shared:user1,user2,user3 group2:inoculation:user4,user5,user6 A user can be a member of multiple inoculation groups, but a user cannot be a member of both an inoculation group and a shared group. DSPAM will read this file upon startup and determine if the user fits into any particular group. Use the dspam_stats tool to keep an eye on the effectiveness of shared groups. If a shared group experiences poor performance, find the users whose email behavior is inconsistent with that of the group and remove them from the group. CLASSIFICATION Classification groups allow a group of users to network their results together. If DSPAM is uncertain of whether a message is spam or nonspam for a group member, all other members of the group are queried. If another member believes the message to be spam, it will be marked as spam. A user can simultaneously be a member of a classification and inoculation group, but a user cannot be a member of both a classification group and a shared group. ----------------------------------------------------- > So many groups and no clue which one/ which combination to use :( > What do you want to do? What is the goal you try to reach by using groups? > Which combinations are succesful in use? > Probably all of them. > regards Sven // Steve -- Der GMX SmartSurfer hilft bis zu 70% Ihrer Onlinekosten zu sparen! Ideal für Modem und ISDN: http://www.gmx.net/de/go/smartsurfer
