Highly NOT recommended... but what I have users doing is this:

Assuming you're using sendmail/procmail... set up a .procmailrc file 
that checks for:

X-Spam-Level: ********

(8 stars = spam score 8 or better).

If it is that - dump it to /dev/null

As in:
---
SHELL=/bin/sh

:0:
* ^X-Spam-Level: ********
{
        :0
        /dev/null
}
---

--Will

> Hello all,
> 
> I've had a good look around but am unable to find an answer to this 
> exact scenario. I've had a bash @ using global settings on the 
> user_pref's file, but didn't appear to work, so figured I'd ask. If 
you 
> are aware of a reference to this that I've missed, I apologise.
> 
> Pretty much all I'm trying to do is setup on a per-user basis an auto 
> delete mechanism for mail if it receives > score XX. I've read all 
the 
> doco about the preferred method being to setup filters and do it 
client 
> side, but a number of clients of mine are getting a large amount of 
> spam, and we've been watching what's been flagged as such over a 6 
month 
> period and there's been only 1 instance of a false positive (which 
was 
> an exteremely spam like email anyway, so understandable) and the 
clients 
> more than happy to take that risk. Going to keep his required_score 
at 5 
> but want to auto-delete if it's above 8 or so. Any help would be 
greatly 
> appreciated.
> 
> TIA
> 
> 


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