Hello, Chris Lightfoot writes:
no! you need to ask the recipient of the mail whether they
wanted to receive it. That is the only way you can tell
whether it was spam or not -- users don't typically care
about idiotic conditions which ISPs try to apply to them
or to other people (and rightly so).

If the system was set up properly to begin with, the only results you should have to evaulate is what your end-user has already determined as spam. Any message that is suspicious should always be tagged with a warn first. Then it goes to the user. Finally, the user responds with a this is spam or not spam. Once the message has been identified as spam by the user, there should be no further need for the user to continually identify it. Subsequently, during your log analysis, there should be a cross reference to the actual spam IP addresses reported.
-- > http://tanaya.net/vmw/
In Memory of Private George Cecil Melton Let us not forget Private George Cecil Melton, casualty of the Vietnam War. As a member of the Marine Corps, PVT Melton served our country until May 25th, 1969 in Quang Nam, South Vietnam. He was 19 years old and was not married. George died from small arms fire/grenade. His body was recovered. George was born on October 4th, 1949 in Three Rivers, Texas. PVT Melton is on panel 24W, line 105 of the Vietnam Memorial Wall in Washington D.C. He served our country for less than a year.

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