Killing spam - archive?

Sergey Semenyuk serge_ss-rieW9WUcm8FFJ04o6PK0Fg at public.gmane.org
Wed Apr 21 23:59:14 UTC 2004


By the way, I could be wrong, by here was a discussion about filtering spam
e-mails where contents is substituted by look-alike symbols. Like v1agra or
shit like this. Could somebody send me either a link or archive. Just want
to use some ideas.

Sergey

-----Original Message-----
From: owner-tlug-lxSQFCZeNF4 at public.gmane.org [mailto:owner-tlug-lxSQFCZeNF4 at public.gmane.org] On Behalf Of JoeHill
Sent: Wednesday, April 21, 2004 7:58 PM
To: tlug-lxSQFCZeNF4 at public.gmane.org
Subject: Re: [TLUG]: Killing spam

On Wed, 21 Apr 2004 01:09:48 -0400
William Park disseminated the following:

> > http://www.xisp.net/notespam/
> > 
> > http://mailfilter.sourceforge.net/
> 
> Rather than relying on 3rd-party program claiming to know what emails
> you should receive and what emails you shouldn't, you should tailor
> ~/.procmailrc to suit your needs.

Actually, Mailfilter is very similar to procmail in that it uses regexp to
define rules, AKA 'recipes'. Cool thing is, it deletes the spam before you
even
download it; and since MF automagically 'normalizes' the header info, you
don't
have to worry about insanely complicated regexp to deal with the V-ia?g*ra
stuff.

This one alone catches a *lot* of spam:

SCORE +100=^(To|Cc):(.*sympatico\.ca){3}

Notespam is like a Procmail plugin, and it is customizable to be as
aggressive
as you wish.

Of course, I also use Dallman Ross's virussnag and the every popular YAVR,
since
Mailfilter only looks at the headers, not the content, and Notespam is based
only on RBL's.

*All* HTML mail gets tagged as spam, except mail to my biz/family address.

Not *everybody* has the grey matter or time to learn regexp and egrep in all
their wondrous glory, as you evidently do ;-)

-- 
JoeHill
Registered Linux user #282046
Homepage: www.orderinchaos.org
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++
"Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold..." -- William Butler Yeats
--
The Toronto Linux Users Group.      Meetings: http://tlug.ss.org
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--
The Toronto Linux Users Group.      Meetings: http://tlug.ss.org
TLUG requests: Linux topics, No HTML, wrap text below 80 columns
How to UNSUBSCRIBE: http://tlug.ss.org/subscribe.shtml





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