Michael Loftis writes: >OK then lets take a look at the tags you hit on. Right away you notice >FROM_AND_TO_SAME -- so there's 1.3 points your recievers probably won't >get. A large portion of your message is in UPPERCASE. If you can reformat >the message so that less of it is in uppercase you can pass that check.
True, but the biggest cause was RAZOR_CHECK. >The bottom line is you can not control what recievers consider spam. You >can put a note in the bottom of the message warning them, or at the time >they subscribe warning them, but it's up to the users to decide to filter >or not filter a message. No I can't prevent them from considering it spam. But if a widely used tool blocks my email, *I* have a problem. Anyway it appears I misunderstood how Razor works; I thought it used the message headers to block certain sites that generate spam, rather than looking at the message body. --Bill. -- William R Ward [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.wards.net/~bill/ ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- "A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds, adored by little statesmen and philosophers and divines." - Emerson ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.NET email is sponsored by: SourceForge Enterprise Edition + IBM + LinuxWorld = Something 2 See! http://www.vasoftware.com _______________________________________________ Razor-users mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/razor-users