> > Mailwasher is my choice. Same sort of thing, but it lets you 'bounce' > spam - those sending spam messages think it never reached you.
Not true, usually. The normal result of mailwasher (or other post- delivery anti-spam tools) is that the poor innocent third party whose mail identity is being spoofed in the envelope data finds that his mailbox fills up with spam bounces and rejection messages. The best thing to do with spam is to silently discard it. In the vanishingly remote case that you can actually determine a valid email address for the sender the chances that anyone actually reads any bounce messages sent to that address is basically zero.

