Did not know that. Will disable & see if that does the trick. Again:
Thank you so much.
On 27 Jan 2021, at 13:09, Steven M. Bellovin wrote:
I'm mostly out of ideas, but have you disabled SpamSieve on the
older laptop? You should not have it active on both at once. (If
you use both computers, see the SpamSieve documentation on
remote operation.)
On 27 Jan 2021, at 12:47, Ken Pope wrote:
Thank you so much for such a clear & detailed explanation.
What baffles me is that I migrated everything from a 2018 MacBook Pro
to an M1 13-inch MacBook Pro and have changed nothing. The set-ups
are identical. Yet while the MM/SpamSieve combo on the 2018
continues to work perfectly (I just got it out & checked), the
MM/SpamSieve combo on the M1 doesn’t work at all. Have tried
everything I can think of, yet nothing seems to help. Any
suggestions greatly appreciated. Thanks.
On 26 Jan 2021, at 21:44, Steven M. Bellovin wrote:
On 26 Jan 2021, at 18:52, Ken Pope wrote:
Have tried all sorts of way to fix a problem w/ SpamSieve since I
moved to an M1 13-inch MacBook Pro (checked everything: SpamSieve
correctly labels spam but spam ends up in inbox & legit mail ends
up in junk mailbox) and can’t think of anything else to do but
uninstall both MM & Spamsieve & install new versions of both.
My question is: If I completely uninstall MM, download a clean
version & reinstall it, do I lose all the IMAP mailboxes I’ve
created in MM?
The IMAP mailboxes are on the server; it will neither know nor care
that you've done anything to the client. However…
Smart mailboxes are part of your MailMate configuration. If you wipe
that out—more on that below—you'll lose them.
It strikes me as extremely likely that your problem is
configuration, not
the executables. Deleting and reinstalling the applications won't
fix that.
Wiping out your configuration files would likely do more to fix your
problem, but of course you'd have to recreate a lot. The question is
what the issue might be.
The obvious place to look is any rules—or any rules on any other
devices
you have that talk to that IMAP server. For that matter, in some
situations
there are server-side rules. Generally speaking, having more than
one
computer that can touch the same messages is a recipe for trouble.
--Steve Bellovin, https://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb
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--Steve Bellovin, https://www.cs.columbia.edu/~smb
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