Re: when whitelisting, do what with marked SPAM?

2023-11-14 Thread joe a

On 11/14/2023 13:46:11, Matus UHLAR - fantomas wrote:

On 14.11.23 13:05, joe a wrote:

Low volume home office user and system.

Occasionally when first dealing with a new entity, their 
correspondence gets flagged as SPAM.


When I whitelist these, what should be done with those messages that 
might remain in "flagged SPAM" or "Missed SPAM"?, thinking along lines 
of keeping BAYES "clean and sharp".  So to speak.


Leave as is?  Delete and re learn?


Simply relearn FPs. Unless you have huge misclassification issue, 
learning as few mail as one should fix BAYES issues.




Move previously tagged SPAM into HAM folder and "relearn"?




Re: when whitelisting, do what with marked SPAM?

2023-11-14 Thread joe a

On 11/14/2023 20:48:27, John Hardin wrote:

On Tue, 14 Nov 2023, joe a wrote:


Low volume home office user and system.

Occasionally when first dealing with a new entity, their 
correspondence gets flagged as SPAM.


When I whitelist these, what should be done with those messages that 
might remain in "flagged SPAM" or "Missed SPAM"?, thinking along lines 
of keeping BAYES "clean and sharp".  So to speak.


Leave as is?  Delete and re learn?


For a low volume home office user, I would simply NOT autolearn. Set up 
a hambox and a spambox and manually feed them and train from them.





I have autolearn off and have a spam and ham folder set up and "relearn" 
twice daily.


Re: when whitelisting, do what with marked SPAM?

2023-11-14 Thread John Hardin

On Tue, 14 Nov 2023, joe a wrote:


Low volume home office user and system.

Occasionally when first dealing with a new entity, their correspondence gets 
flagged as SPAM.


When I whitelist these, what should be done with those messages that might 
remain in "flagged SPAM" or "Missed SPAM"?, thinking along lines of keeping 
BAYES "clean and sharp".  So to speak.


Leave as is?  Delete and re learn?


For a low volume home office user, I would simply NOT autolearn. Set up a 
hambox and a spambox and manually feed them and train from them.



--
 John Hardin KA7OHZhttp://www.impsec.org/~jhardin/
 jhar...@impsec.org pgpk -a jhar...@impsec.org
 key: 0xB8732E79 -- 2D8C 34F4 6411 F507 136C  AF76 D822 E6E6 B873 2E79
---
  The reason it took so long to get Bin Laden is that it took the
  SEALs five years to swim that far into the desert.  -- anon
---
 1,263 days since the first private commercial manned orbital mission (SpaceX)


Re: when whitelisting, do what with marked SPAM?

2023-11-14 Thread Matus UHLAR - fantomas

On 14.11.23 13:05, joe a wrote:

Low volume home office user and system.

Occasionally when first dealing with a new entity, their 
correspondence gets flagged as SPAM.


When I whitelist these, what should be done with those messages that 
might remain in "flagged SPAM" or "Missed SPAM"?, thinking along lines 
of keeping BAYES "clean and sharp".  So to speak.


Leave as is?  Delete and re learn?


Simply relearn FPs. Unless you have huge misclassification issue, learning 
as few mail as one should fix BAYES issues.


--
Matus UHLAR - fantomas, uh...@fantomas.sk ; http://www.fantomas.sk/
Warning: I wish NOT to receive e-mail advertising to this address.
Varovanie: na tuto adresu chcem NEDOSTAVAT akukolvek reklamnu postu.
M$ Win's are shit, do not use it !


when whitelisting, do what with marked SPAM?

2023-11-14 Thread joe a

Low volume home office user and system.

Occasionally when first dealing with a new entity, their correspondence 
gets flagged as SPAM.


When I whitelist these, what should be done with those messages that 
might remain in "flagged SPAM" or "Missed SPAM"?, thinking along lines 
of keeping BAYES "clean and sharp".  So to speak.


Leave as is?  Delete and re learn?