[kdepim-users] Filter on language

ianseeks ianseeks at dsl.pipex.com
Mon Nov 19 16:49:11 GMT 2012


On Saturday 17 Nov 2012 19:48:32 Martin Steigerwald wrote:
> Am Donnerstag, 15. November 2012 schrieb ianseeks:
> > Hi
> 
> Hi Ian,
> 
> > I'm getting loads of spam from a japanese sites and i'm now bored of
> > updating my junk filters every day .
> > 
> > Is there a way i can filter out emails that are using asian language
> > fonts?
> 
> I am not aware of something like this. But the encoding might be in the
> mail headers that you can view with the V key. You can filter for anything
> in there. Maybe there is also something else. Hmmm, I scanned some of my
> using foreign charsets spams that CRM114 has sorted my into spam folder
> and they do not seem to have any helpful headers.
> 
> Thus I can only imagine running it through an external program that
> detects encoding, or a small script calling such a program and then
> decides whether spam or not.
> 
> Anyway, I recommend something more generic – at least if you are running
> your own mail server: policyd-weight. It removes most spam at SMTP level
> by some tests and asking a set of blacklists.

thanks but i'm not running my own mail server.



> On the client I suggest CRM114. I wrote an article on how to integrate,
> but did not test this with KDEPIM 2 already. Tell me if you are interested
> and I see if this article has been translated to english and possibly
> provide a link.
> 
> Whats the advantage of CRM114 or another self-learning spam filter? You do
> not have to create your own spam filter rules every day.
> 
> From the tons of spam to my mail address each day, I only see 0-10 in
> unsure folder. There are more in the local spam folder, but I only scan
> subject lines quickly to make sure CRM114 had no false positives, which it
> didn´t recently.
> 
> In fact, policyd-weight and CRM114 make it possible to actually read my
> mail. Otherwise I would have to search it in a sea of spam first.
> 
> CRM114 could be used client side, even stand alone. I use it client side,
> but still with POP3. Heck, this works so fine and I only ever read my mail
> on this laptop, that I might continue using POP3.
> 
> Both need some time I get the concepts and set them up, but IMHO its
> really worth it. I have no single hand crafted spam filter rule at all. So
> I do not have to do anything except for give CRM114 a little training when
> the next spam wave comes from somewhere else than Japan. Actually I hardly
> ever notice any spam waves. CRM114 learns quickly, efficiently and also
> forgets as needed. All with just two about 12 MiB sized mmap()ed files.
> 
> And this setup works for years already. Without any major changes.
> 
> With everybody and every provider doing this, there would probably not be
> a market for spammers anymore. Thats the hope of some CRM114 developers.
> 
> That said, there may be other spam filters being that efficient, like dspam
> or newer spamassassin versions that I think the Zimbra at work uses.
> CRM114 isn´t even only a spam filter, it can classify any texts.
> 
> Ciao,

Thanks for your response. I was trying to avoid spamassassin et al as I'm a 
lazy bugger  :o)

regards

Ian
_______________________________________________
KDE PIM users mailing list
Subscription management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kdepim-users


More information about the kdepim-users mailing list