David Abrahams wrote on Thursday, January 04, 2007 11:46 AM -0600:
I've got the OCR stuff enabled on Unix. It definitely works some of
the time; in X-SpamBayes-Evidence I can see spam words picked out of
the image that don't appear elsewhere in the message. There is a
category of those
Seth Goodman [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
David Abrahams wrote on Thursday, January 04, 2007 11:46 AM -0600:
I've got the OCR stuff enabled on Unix. It definitely works some of
the time; in X-SpamBayes-Evidence I can see spam words picked out of
the image that don't appear elsewhere in the
Hello, and Happy New Year.
I've been using SpamBayes for several years and think its great.
Just before Christmas I started to notice that some e-mails do not get moved
to my Spam Junk folder when I use the 'Delete as Spam' button.
When I click on the 'SpamBayes' button on my toolbar to access
I've been using the outlook plugin for quite some time and I like it a lot.
For various reasons, I'd like to move to the pop3 proxy. I have it
installed, but I was wondering if there was an easy way to move all the
training I've done using the plugin to the server so the pop3proxy can use
it
Charlotte, if you mean the SpamBayes Outlook plug-in, uninstall
in the usual way:
Control Panel - Add or Remove Programs - SpamBayes n.n.n
This does not remove the training database, so if you want
complete removal you'll have to go in and delete the
folders/files left behind.
But you'd be
David Abrahams wrote on Friday, January 05, 2007 9:22 AM -0600:
Seth Goodman [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Image spam is gradually moving in the direction of a captcha:
images that people can identify but computers can't. How far they
can go before it becomes so annoying that no one will