Aag_uk wrote on Fri, 17 Aug 2007 23:58:05 -0700 (PDT): > >b) requires LDAP, NIS, etc., so that SpamAssassin can have a clue > >about your accounts; > >c) requires competent fuzzy matching so that, when a user sends mail > >to "Chris St. Pierre <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>", it doesn't flag it > >as spam because my "real name" is Christopher; > >d) is prone to FPs, since its the clients who add that name, and it > >could be literally _anything_ ("chris", "some guy", "", etc.) without > >being spam; and > > My idea was that you could have a list that links each recipient to possible > names that could be used (basically first name, surname and possibly a short > name), not necesary NIS or LDAP. About fuzzy matching I think it shouldn't > be difficult to do. It´s something like what Google does when you misspell > something or enter something that is not "usual", it suggests you another > search and, in my opinion, its guess is usually very good.
You don't understand at all. What gets put in the comment is up to the sender. They can put *everything* there and it's legit. You do not control it at all and you do not send them a reply "please change my name in your addressbook to xyz". It can be the name, a part of the name, several parts of the name, reverted parts of the name, a company name in all its variations, an acronym, misspelled, something like "Tony's brother", the email address, quoted or bracketed in several ways, could be nothing - too show a few. Such a rule would be prone to a huge number of FPs. It may work for you after a lot of work, but not for others. It's not worth it. Kai -- Kai Schätzl, Berlin, Germany Get your web at Conactive Internet Services: http://www.conactive.com