I use bayespam. http://www.garyarnold.com/projects.php#bayespam I used a
RBL list before and found out that once someone or a domain is on a list
that I could not get mail from that user and or domain. After a while I
found out that many of the mailing-list that we got here at the office
some how got on a list, so I had to change spam filters. Bayespam
compares the content of the email to email that you tell it that is
spam. This way if you want every user could have there own spam filter
system. It take a little while for it to learn but once it does it works
GREAT! My filter is 99% correct. I feel that this is the best filter out
there, because it learns. There is email out there that I would see as
spam, but for some of the users here, they don't think so.

--Tony

On Mon, 2002-12-16 at 00:27, Taymour A. El Erian wrote:
> Hi,
> 
>       I have a setup with 2 e-mail servers one for sending and one for 
> receiving e-mail.
> The mail exchanger uses latest qmail-ldap and rbllist contains 
> bl.spamcop.net, the sending server got listed at spamcop so it was not 
> able to deliver any messages to the exchanger and message never bounced 
> too (because sender's e-mails are on the exchanger)
> Is there a way to tell qmail not to check spamcop for one or some ip 
> addresses.

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