POP3 mail filtering [was: Re: [newbie] OT's on this list]

2003-01-09 Thread Robin Turner
Anne Wilson wrote:

On Thursday 09 Jan 2003 8:58 am, Hylton Conacher (ZR1HPC) wrote:


Wouldn't that be nice if the POP mail system could do that! In my
experience, using Netscape and Mozilla mail, I either download all the
messages from the ISP or none.



Are you sure it doesn't?  I'm sure I used just that to get rid of spam from a 
certain address, and mine is a pop account.  I'm using KMail, and I'm sure it 
was simple to activate there.


AFAIK, Mozilla does not allow server-side mail filtering - the only 
options are to download everything, or only messages under a certain 
size (not very useful for spam filtering, since the problem is lot's of 
little messages, not one or two big ones).  On the positive side, 
Mozilla/Netscape allows you the option of leaving messages on the server 
but having them deleted there when they are deleted locally - very 
useful when you're logging on from different computers.

The radical solution is to install filtering software on your server 
account, but most ISPs won't allow that, I suppose.  Some webmail 
providers allow you to set filters from the webmail client.  Another 
possibility is if your server allows telnet access, telnet in, look at 
your mail with something like pine, delete everything that looks 
uninteresting, then open the rest with your favourite mail client (I do 
this a lot to clean up my less used accounts - e.g. a cgi-bin account).

Sir Robin


--
Do unto others what you would like others to do unto you. And have fun 
doing it.
- Linus Torvalds

Robin Turner
IDMYO,
Bilkent University
Ankara 06533
Turkey

www.bilkent.edu.tr/~robin


Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? 
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com



Re: POP3 mail filtering [was: Re: [newbie] OT's on this list]

2003-01-09 Thread Adolfo Bello
 little messages, not one or two big ones).  On the positive side, 
 Mozilla/Netscape allows you the option of leaving messages on the server 
 but having them deleted there when they are deleted locally - very 
 useful when you're logging on from different computers.

I really miss this one in Evolution. I hope Miguel De Icaza is suscribed
to this list.

Adolfo



Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? 
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com



RE: POP3 mail filtering [was: Re: [newbie] OT's on this list]

2003-01-09 Thread Jamie . Kerwick
I have a windows based mail client The Bat! Which can do selective
downloading of mail. You just create filters for selective download, as well
as a selective download based on file sizes. 

If The Bat! Can do it I'm sure other email software should be able to


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-Original Message-
From: Robin Turner [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: 09 January 2003 13:44
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: POP3 mail filtering [was: Re: [newbie] OT's on this list]


Anne Wilson wrote:
 On Thursday 09 Jan 2003 8:58 am, Hylton Conacher (ZR1HPC) wrote:
 
Wouldn't that be nice if the POP mail system could do that! In my 
experience, using Netscape and Mozilla mail, I either download all the 
messages from the ISP or none.

 
 Are you sure it doesn't?  I'm sure I used just that to get rid of spam 
 from a
 certain address, and mine is a pop account.  I'm using KMail, and I'm sure
it 
 was simple to activate there.
 

AFAIK, Mozilla does not allow server-side mail filtering - the only 
options are to download everything, or only messages under a certain 
size (not very useful for spam filtering, since the problem is lot's of 
little messages, not one or two big ones).  On the positive side, 
Mozilla/Netscape allows you the option of leaving messages on the server 
but having them deleted there when they are deleted locally - very 
useful when you're logging on from different computers.

The radical solution is to install filtering software on your server 
account, but most ISPs won't allow that, I suppose.  Some webmail 
providers allow you to set filters from the webmail client.  Another 
possibility is if your server allows telnet access, telnet in, look at 
your mail with something like pine, delete everything that looks 
uninteresting, then open the rest with your favourite mail client (I do 
this a lot to clean up my less used accounts - e.g. a cgi-bin account).

Sir Robin


-- 
Do unto others what you would like others to do unto you. And have fun 
doing it.
- Linus Torvalds

Robin Turner
IDMYO,
Bilkent University
Ankara 06533
Turkey

www.bilkent.edu.tr/~robin




Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? 
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com



Re: POP3 mail filtering [was: Re: [newbie] OT's on this list]

2003-01-09 Thread Anne Wilson
On Thursday 09 Jan 2003 1:44 pm, Robin Turner wrote:
 Anne Wilson wrote:
  On Thursday 09 Jan 2003 8:58 am, Hylton Conacher (ZR1HPC) wrote:
 Wouldn't that be nice if the POP mail system could do that! In my
 experience, using Netscape and Mozilla mail, I either download all the
 messages from the ISP or none.
 
  Are you sure it doesn't?  I'm sure I used just that to get rid of spam
  from a certain address, and mine is a pop account.  I'm using KMail, and
  I'm sure it was simple to activate there.

 AFAIK, Mozilla does not allow server-side mail filtering - the only
 options are to download everything, or only messages under a certain
 size (not very useful for spam filtering, since the problem is lot's of
 little messages, not one or two big ones).  On the positive side,
 Mozilla/Netscape allows you the option of leaving messages on the server
 but having them deleted there when they are deleted locally - very
 useful when you're logging on from different computers.

Ah - that explains it.  It's so long since I used Mozilla mail that I forgot 
that.  As I said, I used it in KMail, which, under settings, has Configure 
Pop Filters.

Anne


Want to buy your Pack or Services from MandrakeSoft? 
Go to http://www.mandrakestore.com