Dave Williss wrote:
I've started recieving a few spams a day that aren't even getting
scanned by Spamassassin. Or at least they don't get any X-Spam
headers added on.
The messages in question all have forged senders to make them look
like they came from an existing user within my own domain
On Thursday 15 February 2007 15:48, Dave Williss wrote:
> Is there some Spamassassin rule that may be auto-whitelisting this
> (because the forged sender is an actual account), or is Postfix confused
> into thinking that the sender is local and just not running it through
> SA? Now that I think abo
OK, now I'm really confused. I just noticed that *most* of my incoming
mail has no Spamassassin headers. A few every now and then do and they
say they were scanned by our mail server, so it's sort of working. I
also see that the auto-whitelist file in my .spamassassin directory on
the mail s
I've started recieving a few spams a day that aren't even getting
scanned by Spamassassin. Or at least they don't get any X-Spam headers
added on.
The messages in question all have forged senders to make them look like
they came from an existing user within my own domain even though the IP
t
Owen, please don't copy messages to both dev@ and [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Anyway, this like the same problem described in bug 3838. Please
follow-up at:
http://bugzilla.spamassassin.org/show_bug.cgi?id=3838
I have no idea what the cause is -- we really need someone to work
through this and figure o
I take it the answer is "No" then? ;-)
Thanks,
Owen
> Hi,
>
> I'm running exim on a Solaris box with mail for certain users being piped
> through spamc (V2.63), which is using a newly built Fedora core 2 spamd
> (V3.0.0) server. (This server did have 2.64 on, but was upgraded through
> CPAN)
Hi,
I'm running exim on a Solaris box with mail for certain users being piped
through spamc (V2.63), which is using a newly built Fedora core 2 spamd
(V3.0.0) server. (This server did have 2.64 on, but was upgraded through CPAN).
I'm getting the following errors in the spamd server's log:
Sep