Hello Tim,

On Tuesday, March 23, 2010 you wrote:

TH> Hello Jack,

>> K9 simply adds the word "SPAM" (or whatever you tell it to add) to
>> the subject line *before* the message gets to TB!. It doesn't do
>> anything else (except learn from experience).  Once the message
>> reaches your (my) inbox I have a filter set up which routes any
>> incoming message with the word "Spam" anywhere in the subject line
>> into a folder called amusingly enough, "Spam."  I then confirm that
>> they are indeed spam and manually delete them from the "Spam" folder.

>> Also each time you fetch your email you have to open K9 and tell it
>> which of the incoming messages are spam.  From then on it will flag
>> (with the word "Spam" in the subject) any messages which match or
>> closely match the criteria it uses to identify spam.

>> I seem to recall that K9 is much more sophisticated that I'm making
>> it out to be. It's been so long since I started using K9 that I've
>> forgotten just about everything I ever knew about it.  That's why
>> it's important to read the information contained at the
>> http://keir.net/k9.html site and the discussions found in TB!'s archives.


TH> I understand what you are saying except for one thing: K9 defines Spam
TH> within  the K9 program but does not tag emails with the word Spam upon
TH> TB retrieving them so I do not understand what you are referring to by
TH> the  word  spam  in the subject heading.  Can you further explain what
TH> you mean by K9 inserting or tagging the subject headings with the word
TH> spam so I can set TB to send these emails to a spam filter.

Well, first of all, after you installed K9 it should then automatically appear 
as a capitol letter "K" lying on it's face somewhere in the system tray every 
time you start your computer.  If the face-down capitol letter K isn't in your 
system tray, then K9 isn't running.  Now, assuming that icon is present, 
double-click on it and open K9.  Once K9 is open, click on the "CONFIGURATION" 
tab.  You should see the upper-right section of that tab dedicated to: "Mark 
emails as Spam by..." where you get to tell K9 how you want spam messages 
marked.  IIRC the default was simply "SPAM".  I changed mine to show "-SPAM-" 
for some reason so that now whenever K9 see an email it knows to be spam, it 
places "-SPAM-" in the subject line of the email before it reaches TB!.

Once the email reaches TB!, my filter detects the "-SPAM-" in the subject line 
and re-routes the email to my "Spam" folder.

HTH,

-- 
Jack LaRosa                  mailto:jlar...@charter.net

Sticking with with The Bat! ver: 4.0.38 for now.
Operating? with Windows XP Pro ver 5 build 2600 Service Pack 3
________________________________________________
Current version is 4.2.23 | 'Using TBUDL' information:
http://www.silverstones.com/thebat/TBUDLInfo.html

Reply via email to