Date: Sat, 14 Oct 2006 09:47:25 -0400 From: Robert Huff <roberthuff@rcn.com> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Non English Spam Message-ID: <17712.60013.23089.385905@jerusalem.litteratus.org> In-Reply-To: <200610140504.37155.freebsd@alaskaparadise.com> References: <200610131712.46822.freebsd@alaskaparadise.com> <453054DE.1030506@infracaninophile.co.uk> <200610140504.37155.freebsd@alaskaparadise.com>
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In checking this out, I came across this in "man spamassassin": ok_locales xx [ yy zz ... ] (default: all) This option is used to specify which locales are considered OK for incoming mail. Mail using the character sets that are allowed by this option will not be marked as possibly being spam in a foreign language. If you receive lots of spam in foreign languages, and never get any non-spam in these languages, this may help. Note that all ISO-8859-* character sets, and Windows code page character sets, are always permitted by default. Set this to "all" to allow all character sets. This is the default. The rules "CHARSET_FARAWAY", "CHARSET_FARAWAY_BODY", and "CHARSET_FARAWAY_HEADERS" are triggered based on how this is set. Examples: ok_locales all (allow all locales) ok_locales en (only allow English) ok_locales en ja zh (allow English, Japanese, and Chinese) Note: if there are multiple ok_locales lines, only the last one is used. Select the locales to allow from the list below: en - Western character sets in general ja - Japanese character sets ko - Korean character sets ru - Cyrillic character sets th - Thai character sets zh - Chinese (both simplified and traditional) character sets Robert Huff
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