I am using Gutsy, and have bogofilter installed, but not spamassassin.
The filter as such works, but doesn't seem to be applied to the inbox,
or new mail at all. I have to select All Messages, and then apply Check
for Junk for the filtering to take place. If Fiesty it worked as it
showed, but not
Evolution still selects spamassasin as the default junk filter in gutsy,
although it should select bogofilter which is installed.
--
Better spam filtering for evolution
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/9870
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Desktop Bugs,
Gutsy here, bogofilter installed, and it seems to work, but the spam
messages don't make it to the spam folder, just stay in inbox.
--
Better spam filtering for evolution
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/9870
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Desktop Bugs,
right, and bogofilter in install by default on gutsy, closing
** Changed in: evolution (Ubuntu)
Status: Confirmed = Fix Released
--
Better spam filtering for evolution
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/9870
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Desktop Bugs,
I believe the fix for this has been released with Gnome 2.20:
http://www.gnome.org/start/2.20/notes/en/index.html#rnusers-email-and-
calendar
Allows you to choose the Spam plugin (SpamAssassin or BogoFilter) via
its preferences. And SpamAssassin will now actually learn when you mark
emails as
I'm experiencing some strange warnings when I run Evolution from the
command line. The warnings are:
(evolution-2.10:27539): evolution-mail-WARNING **: ignored this junk plugin:
not enabled or we have already loaded one
(evolution-2.10:27539): e-utils-WARNING **: Plugin 'Spamassassin junk
Spam filtering under Gutsy Tribe 3 fails using the spamassassin plugin.
It worked fine under 7.04.
--
Better spam filtering for evolution
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/9870
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Desktop Bugs, which is a direct subscriber.
--
For the record, I am running Ubuntu 7.04 on an AMD64 machine, and use
Evolution to access mail via IMAP. Spam filtering with Bogofilter only
works when a group of messages is selected, and the Message-Check for
Junk menu item is chosen. So, it does not check automatically upon
receiving new
On my latest Ubuntu install (6.10), spamassassin was set up by default,
and worked. I just had to create the mail filter.
Previously (and particularly on other distros), it was a pain, of
course!
--
Better spam filtering for evolution
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/9870
You received this bug
OK - not sure if this help much but spamassasin used to work great. I
think it got broke when I went to Edgy.
--
Better spam filtering for evolution
https://launchpad.net/bugs/9870
--
desktop-bugs mailing list
desktop-bugs@lists.ubuntu.com
Hi Ubuntu guys
I have created an Evolution plugin that uses SpamBayes for filtering, it
has not been tested that much yet, so i'm hoping from the adventorous of
you to help test it.
It is available as Debian packages from here (in the etch distribution):
** Changed in: evolution (Ubuntu)
Assignee: Jeff Waugh = (unassigned)
Target: ubuntu-5.04 = None
** Tags added: ubuntulove
--
Better spam filtering for evolution
https://launchpad.net/bugs/9870
--
desktop-bugs mailing list
desktop-bugs@lists.ubuntu.com
As a user, I'm more than happy to train my own spam filter. For me, this
is perfectly understandable and reasonable. Problem is, I've been trying
to train Evolution in Dapper for months now and it still lets a
preposterously large amount of spam through. What a patsy of a spam
tool! And yes, I
** Tags added: evolution
--
Better spam filtering for evolution
https://launchpad.net/bugs/9870
--
desktop-bugs mailing list
desktop-bugs@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/desktop-bugs
what is the interest to add an evolution tag to an evolution bug?
** Tags removed: evolution
--
Better spam filtering for evolution
https://launchpad.net/bugs/9870
--
desktop-bugs mailing list
desktop-bugs@lists.ubuntu.com
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/desktop-bugs
bogofilter ham can be trained with POP/local mail, or with IMAP mail if
you choose to keep local computer synced by cd-ing into the directory
($HOME/.evolution/mail/local/Inbox or
$HOME/.evolution/mail/imap/account/folders/INBOX) and using either
'bogofilter -n
All this training, spam, ham, blah blah - I've got to ask, why we don't
just find a tool which uses RBL's and be done with the whole thing?
In windows I use something called spampal which has a bunch of
functionality but I use it basically as a turnkey method of accessing
RBL's - virtually no
why we don't just find a tool which uses RBL's and be done with the
whole thing?
Because self-learning filters generally perform a lot better after being
trained, when considering both false negatives (no problem if there
aren't many) and false positives (even 1 might get you in trouble). As
I did not succeed in integrating spam-bayes into evolution in a easy manor, coz
i am using IMAP and things became very tricky.
I think bogofilter is the way to, because it is faster and it already has a
evolution plugin. But from what i have read it is not always working right.
And there has to
As the initial poster it is nice to see that this is still concerning
people. I will try to take matters in my own hand and describe the
solution with the python written spambayes. It is really neat and the
classification in spam, ham and UNSURE is really great, coz you only
have to care for the
In respect of SpamAssassin, the SpamAssassin version currently
packaged with Dapper (and Edgy!) is 3.1.0 - now ten months (and four releases!)
out of date.
This makes it (sadly) to all intents and purposes useless as a spam
filtering solution for real world deployment. The spam/spam filtering
It's not true that you can't bootstrap bogofilter with ham from within
evolution, it's just not easily discoverable. What you have to do is
mark at least one ham message as spam, then go to your spam folder and
mark it as ham. From then on it will work.
--
Better spam filtering for evolution
I would guess it should be easy to take a small cross section of users
that have been bogofiltering for awhile and collect all their ham info.
Then this could be shipped with the bogofilter as a reasonable starting
point.
Then again, I haven't looked into this sort of thing at all.
--
Better
I would like to second this. The bogofilter is a much simpler plugin to
setup than spamassassin initially, but I have marked 230 messages as
spam/junk, and Evolution still is doing nothing to automatically mark
messages as spam.
--
Better spam filtering for evolution
Reopening, since as is explained by the mail, bogofilter needs
bootstrapping with ham, that's not possible within Evolution at all, and
you need to invoke bogofilter manually, not to mention extremely
confusing for users. This pretty much kills all the usability of the
plugin until that issue is
25 matches
Mail list logo