> It wouldn't hurt to actually read how it works before criticizing it. I appologize, I should have read into it first. I am obviously just frustrated with getting blocked frequently when my systems have never sent a single spam or virus, even inadvertantly.
> Policyd-weight (the name implies what it does) provides a weighted score to > each "bad" thing an MTA does. The *cumulative* score is what matters. It > also *subtracts* points for good things that an MTA does. So, the > situation you describe should not be a problem. Perhaps it is worth investigating. While machine-learning based filtering has been extremely accurate for me, I have had to resort to some blacklisting merely to reduce my bandwidth consumption when the annoying Windows virus (is that redundant?) of the week pounds my systems. Thanks for the tip. tim ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ This List Sponsored by: Black Hat Attend the Black Hat Briefings & Training USA, July 29-August 3 in Las Vegas. World renowned security experts reveal tomorrow's threats today. Free of vendor pitches, the Briefings are designed to be pragmatic regardless of your security environment. Featuring 36 hands-on training courses and 10 conference tracks, networking opportunities with over 2,500 delegates from 40+ nations. http://www.blackhat.com ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
