Peter Bowyer wrote: > One of its interfaces mimics a DNSBL, and you can use karmasphere > feedsets via Exim's (and many other) DNSBL functionality. But as is > explained on the website, the DNSBL interface can only return yes/no > indications, not scores. If you use the alternative karmad perl > interface, you get scores between -1000 and +1000 for each query. You > can connect to karmad via Exim's readsocket functionality.
That sounds quite interesting. I'm already passing a truckload of information to and from my own little daemon this way and one more information source is always good. > Also note that karmasphere's real trick is to combine any or all of > its reputation sources into one custom feedset that meets your > requirements. Just using the web interface they provide I've been getting some really poor results but I imagine that's probably not the best way to query it. > I'm running in 'log and monitor' mode at the moment with karmasphere, > and when I get some time I'll analyse what's going on. But it's > looking interesting. If you're using it and signed up through that huge amount of information, did you find out what they charge or if it's free or whatever? Ted -- The Exim Manual http://www.exim.org/docs.html http://www.exim.org/exim-html-current/doc/html/spec_html/index.html -- ## List details at http://lists.exim.org/mailman/listinfo/exim-users ## Exim details at http://www.exim.org/ ## Please use the Wiki with this list - http://wiki.exim.org/
