Hi.
The following is a sample of mail that seems to pass through spamassassin,
but somehow seems to get marked as ham as it is tested for spam
content. I am not able to figure out why this is happening.
If anyone could lend some insight on this, I'd appreciate it.
The one major issue I
Here are headers from another example of spam, that is marked STRONGLY as
NOT being spam. What is VERY interesting about THIS one, is that it seems
to actually be FROM me!!! However, it made its rounds on other servers,
first. Is it possible someone is spoofing my email address?? Or, is
Excellent!
I am doing this, now.
One other question: where would I find a reasonably aggressive user_conf
example for version 3.1.3?
Thank you for the help so far.
On Wed, 07 Jun 2006 23:42:39 -0700, Jeff Chan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Try using the SARE stock rules:
Hi,
I have the following example of mail that gets a score of 0.0 - and I am
trying to determine where I should tweak rules for such messages.
Any ideas would be welcomed.
Platform: Fedora 2, Apache, Sendmail, Procmail. Version 3.1.0 of
SpamAssassin, running as a daemon (spamd) invoked
Ok, this one is new to me. Can someone guide me as to where my security
is broken, if I get these headers on a message?
Return-path:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 3.1.0 (2005-09-13) on
helios.hfradio.org
X-Spam-Status: No, score=-0.8 required=1.0
JDOW:
I run Fedora 2 (RedHat) Linux. I've updated most everything. I've not
updated to the very latest Apache. Perhaps that's needed.
How would I go about determining if indeed I have a vulnerability such as
what you are hinting at? I watch logs pretty closely, but cannot farret
out
I'll be going through all scripts installed on the server. I've limited
quite a bit, already. PHP is really really bad. But, I've done a heck of
a lot to close things down. I'm sure I missed something, somewhere, in
the scripts. What a pain, running multiple domains for others.
My