From owner-freebsd-isp Thu Mar 15 11:22:28 2001 Delivered-To: freebsd-isp@freebsd.org Received: from cody.jharris.com (cody.jharris.com [205.238.128.83]) by hub.freebsd.org (Postfix) with ESMTP id AE1C837B719 for ; Thu, 15 Mar 2001 11:22:24 -0800 (PST) (envelope-from nick@rogness.net) Received: from localhost (nick@localhost) by cody.jharris.com (8.11.1/8.9.3) with ESMTP id f2FJQ9405555; Thu, 15 Mar 2001 13:26:10 -0600 (CST) (envelope-from nick@rogness.net) Date: Thu, 15 Mar 2001 13:26:09 -0600 (CST) From: Nick Rogness X-Sender: nick@cody.jharris.com To: Alex Huppenthal Cc: freebsd-isp@FreeBSD.ORG, Len Conrad Subject: Re: Email Junk mail filtering In-Reply-To: <01e701c0ad7f$d1a1d630$1800a8c0@d7k> Message-ID: MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII Sender: owner-freebsd-isp@FreeBSD.ORG Precedence: bulk X-Loop: FreeBSD.org On Thu, 15 Mar 2001, Alex Huppenthal wrote: > > Doesn't Postini offer a seperate mailbox with a link to it when there's > 'detected spam' ? That's a nice touch, if you're customers want filtered > email to their main mailbox, and a seperate junk mail location. procmail is another solution. > > Good question about Postfix.. I'd noticed HP's move to Postfix. If Postfix > can scan incoming email for subjust lines, like "xxx", or "get rich today", > or "special offer" or any number of keywords, it might do really well. > > The novelty of Postini is that it shows you a seperate mailbox which > collects all the detected SPAM. > procmail has this capability. It's in the ports. Nick Rogness - Keep on routing in a Free World... "FreeBSD: The Power to Serve!" To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-isp" in the body of the message