Mel> ... since then, some mails I receive from the system are being
    Mel> flagged as follows:

    Mel> 1.6 BAYES_50 BODY: Bayesian spam probability is 40 to 60%

    Mel> This in itself isn't too bad, as it's still quite low, and varies
    Mel> from email to email, but I would like to issue some guidelines on
    Mel> the site that certain things will trigger SPAM filters, and as we
    Mel> are certainly not in the business of SPAM, and would remove anyone
    Mel> from our system immediately should they be communicating to people
    Mel> unless they had expressly opted-in, I'm wondering if you offer any
    Mel> guidelines for companies such as ourselves.

    Mel> My customers are getting annoyed that their customers, whom want to
    Mel> receive information about special offers, are not always receiving
    Mel> them.  We have introduced a whitelisting policy and guidelines, but
    Mel> I want to have the best chance of delivering high quality, desired
    Mel> emails, and I want to do it right.

Mel,

SpamBayes doesn't offer whitelisting.  That's a job best done by a user's
mail program's filter capability.

I'm not sure where that message is coming from, BTW.  It doesn't look like
anything SpamBayes emits.  A quick check at Google suggests that's a
SpamAssassin message.

Skip
_______________________________________________
[email protected]
http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/spambayes
Check the FAQ before asking: http://spambayes.sf.net/faq.html

Reply via email to