Francisco, I am using Spambayes on an ~20 workstation network. Apparently we all have the same idea as to what is spam because it is working wonderfully. I am using sb_server.py configured through the web interface. You can allow/control whatever connections you desire on the advanced configuration page. I have allowed all users on the local network to have filtering and the ability to train if they wish. For the Thunderbird users, training is quite easy with the ThunderBayes extension - click on a button that gives the choice of ham/spam. Outlook Express users have to use the smtp proxy of Spambayes to train, which unfortunately chokes on outgoing messages greater than ~1MB. The Outlook plugin would not be used in this setup, so it would be configured similarly to OE. If you don't trust your other users to train properly, you can limit access to the UI and smtp proxy to certain workstations. My current project is building a linux router/firewall that redirects all pop3 requests to Spambayes - no reconfiguration required in the mail client. That's especially useful to simplify the configuration for antivirus programs that scan mail through a proxy. I've been training this router for a while, and when I make the switch, users should not even notice.
Dale Francisco Reyes wrote: > I recently found spambayes and looking through archives and the > documentation I have been unable to find any recent information if spambayes > is multiuser or if there are any plans to make it multiuser. > > Anyone can shed any light on this? > _______________________________________________ > SpamBayes@python.org > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/spambayes > Check the FAQ before asking: http://spambayes.sf.net/faq.html > > > _______________________________________________ SpamBayes@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/spambayes Check the FAQ before asking: http://spambayes.sf.net/faq.html