I think I tried that but Procmail runs as the user so that wouldnt work unless 
I use 666 permissions or like a previous poster mentioned , put all users in 
the same group anddo 660 permissions

On Thursday 04 July 2002 01:22, Mike Burger wrote:
> You definitely don't need 666 permissions on the folder.
>
> If you're testing it, you could just redirect it to a folder/file in your
> own home directory...like /home/anthony/mail/SPAM.
>
> On Wed, 3 Jul 2002, Anthony Hologounis wrote:
> > Let me ask, so this is the best way to handle spam?
> >
> > Righ tnow I have a folder called  /var/spool/mail/SPAM that has 666
> > permissions. I think this is dangerous but I want to be able to collect
> > all of the spam in one folder.
> > So I can see how well my procmail/spamassassin settigns are working.
> >
> > If  there is another way of doing this thenenlightenme....
> >
> > Cheers!
> >
> > Anthony
> >
> > >The problem, I think, is that you're trying to have each user's account
> > >write the spam to /var/spool/mail/caughtspam.
> > >
> > >Only one user can own that file, and if it's not been set with
> > > permissions to allow world to write to it, they won't be able to.
> > >
> > >Hence the reason I filter it to "$HOME/mail/caughtspam"...it's going to
> > >the user's own subdirectory, off of their own home directory, where
> > >they'll have permission to write.
> >
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