On Thu, Nov 14, 2002 at 08:42:58AM -0500, Kevin D. Clark wrote: > As for other spam handling tools, I continue to be impressed with > SpamCop (http://www.spamcop.net/). I also use Emailias > (http://www.emailias.com) a lot (run by a friend of mine).
In addition to experimenting with Bogofilter, I'm using SpamBouncer <http://www.spambouncer.org/> with a fairly conservative set of blocklists (including SpamCop's), and a distributed checksum system called Vipul's Razor <http://razor.sourceforge.net/>. The biggest problem with a rule-based filter like SpamBouncer, of course, is the large number of false positives. Razor by itself catches 75% of my spam, with almost no false positives. > I've also thought about deploying a system like ASK > (http://www.paganini.net/ask/) (or one of the other similar projects), > but I still have some reservations about it (some part of me would > just prefer to help rid the world of spam (by complaining) rather than > constructing an ASK-like firewall around my email system. But there > seems to be no shortage of spammers out there... I don't use ASK and similar systems because they seem to me to be too difficult for non-technical correspondents to handle. -- Roger -- Roger H. Goun Brentwood Country Animal Hospital, P.C. Chief Kennel Officer Exeter, New Hampshire, USA _______________________________________________ gnhlug-discuss mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.gnhlug.org/mailman/listinfo/gnhlug-discuss
