From: "Tim" ignored_mailbox@yahoo.com.au
On Tue, 2006-12-26 at 09:08 +0000, James Wilkinson wrote:
Also, I'd strongly recommend training SA's Bayesian analysis, using the sa-learn program. SpamAssassin won't use Bayesian analysis until it has learnt 200 good ("ham") e-mails and 200 spams.
Isn't that supposed to be the point of the junk/not-junk buttons on mail clients?
In general those are put there by spammers who are hopping you'll push the wrong button. {O,o}
Actually what it does and how it works with YOUR usage probably depend on your "global" versus "per user" Bayes files, scores, and rules.
Bayesian analysis continues to be a *very* good way of analysing e-mail, in my experience.
Back when I was still using Windows, I used to use the in-built one that came with The Bat! mail client. It seemed to do a reasonable job, and it was damn quick (unlike the speed of any kind of mail filtering in Evolution). Though, before that, I'd knocked most spam off, without any false positives, with about 12 mail rules.
Quick - maybe. But Bayesian analysis without rules is like a bicycle with only one pedal.
{^_^}