Re: [Spambayes] date for new release to handle image spam?

2007-01-05 Thread Seth Goodman
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

Re: [Spambayes] date for new release to handle image spam?

2007-01-05 Thread David Abrahams
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

[Spambayes] Outlook only partially working.

2007-01-05 Thread Damian Bree
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

[Spambayes] Move training from Outlook plugin to pop3proxy?

2007-01-05 Thread Mike Montalvo
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

Re: [Spambayes] Help

2007-01-05 Thread Bill Hely
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

Re: [Spambayes] date for new release to handle image spam?

2007-01-05 Thread Seth Goodman
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