Those kinds op spam are hitting all kinds of rules here, including rulesets from SARE:

X-Spam-Status: Yes, hits=14.1 tagged_above=-999.0 required=3.0 tests=BAYES_99, EXTRA_MPART_TYPE, HTML_10_20, HTML_MESSAGE, MY_CID_AND_ARIAL2, MY_CID_AND_CLOSING, MY_CID_AND_STYLE, MY_CID_ARIAL2_CLOSING, MY_CID_ARIAL_STYLE, SARE_GIF_ATTACH, TVD_FW_GRAPHIC_ID1

I suspect you haven't done much tweaking on your SA setup?

Leander

On 30-okt-2006, at 21:45, User for SpamAssassin Mail List wrote:


Has anyone come up with a rule that will combat the spam that I have been
seeing lately?

That is a spam that rambles about much of nothing then has an image or a
link at the bottom.

I see more and more of these and it seems like the spammers have figured
out a way to get this past SA.

I include one such message at the end of this post.

Thanks,

Ken



Example of this spam:

[IMAGE]
Jeg er udvalgt som blogger, dvs. There is little doubt that asynchronous
solutions require us to think in new ways as we have to deal with
concurrency, out-of-sequence issues, correlation and other. Ingen
interesse mere. But it makes me feel better that Ted Neward seems to beat me in that category, though. In my eyes this is really the best indicator of success for a pattern language. We don't have to go further than the local coffee shop. But it makes me feel better that Ted Neward seems to beat me in that category, though. While the conference logistics can be quirky at times the content is top notch. Even if you choose the "right" specification, it still is likely to evolve over time. Jeg er udvalgt som
blogger, dvs. However, when building distributed applications, that
asymmetry really has no place. After "loosely coupled", "stateless" must
be a close runner-up as the ultimate nirvana in buzzword-compliant
architectures. While Java is not necessarily the greatest language to
"host" a DSL we can go a lot further than developers generally believe or care for. Ideally, the debate would involve alcoholic beverages and the other person would pick up the check. This time, though, Ken Arnold stole a little bit of my show by publishing an excellent article in ACM Queue
magazine called "Programmers are People, too". During the proverbial
hallway discussions we started talking about boxes and lines, but in a
profound way. Read on to learn more about the implementation and our
experiences with intra-JVM EDA. Hearing this tag line for the third or
fourth time got me wondering, "what really is the difference between
coding and configuring? For one thing, a fair number of my intellectual drinking buddies tend to congregate around the large software company in the Pacific Northwest. First, because I was going to meet the exalted one
in person.





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