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What's the point of this configuration file? Why should some sites
generally be allowed to send spamy looking messages. Take amazon for
example. They send a lot of commercial emails, people did never ask for.
They tell you you could opt out (as just about any spammer does) but don't
always honour this. For me this exactly is UCE == spam.

If some people want to receive them, they can always whitelist them in
their personal configuration files but as long as this in the
/usr/share/spamassassin config files I cannot undo this because it will be
overwritten on updates.

If the sender does not want to be blocked, there are free to write decent
mails, which will always score 0. Period. Why make any exceptions?

I don't understand why to use whitelisting anyway. I feel a rule with a
negative score would be more flexible, i.e. allowing messages matching
this rule to score higher in the body/header tests and still not beeing
tagged as spam. And -- anyone could overwrite their score.

Jan
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