If SpamBayes is responsible, it'll be in either your spam folder or your possible spam folder. Either way, once you've located it, use the "Not Spam" or "Recover from Spam" button (depending on your version) to tell SpamBayes that it's not actually spam. Since SpamBayes processes tokens other than the sender, you may have to train on more than one. However, I'd recommend looking at the message before clicking the "Not Spam" button. It's possible that, despite the apparent sender, the message really is spam. If SpamBayes is not responsible for the movement of your message, you'll need to look elsewhere. You appear to be running Outlook, so perhaps Outlook or Exchange moved the message.
________________________________ From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Bill Marsano Sent: Saturday, June 09, 2007 9:50 AM To: [email protected] Subject: [Spambayes] retrieval from spambayes Just this minute, while watching messages being downloaded, I saw a message come in from an old friend. Suddenly it disappeared --removed, I imagine by Spambayes. And not listed among Junk suspects. How do I get it back? How do I tell Spambayes to accept this sender? Thank you, Bill Marsano
_______________________________________________ [email protected] http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/spambayes Check the FAQ before asking: http://spambayes.sf.net/faq.html
