![]() ![]() Also, I have the log and will be sending it to you. I have not been able to see a way to make Thunderbird talk to Spamsieve. ![]() The other program links SpamSieve and is, in that respect, very effective. However, I removed all of the filters to see if that makes any difference. 5/26/19, 10:55 PM more options I have been using a different email client for a year or so but am now returning to Thunderbird. Well before this problem starting happening a few weeks ago. Then create the file /etc/dovecot/sieve/learn-spam.sieve and let it contain. Now they did have some filters set up, but they were really old and have been in their for years. First order of business is enabling the IMAPSieve plugin for the IMAP. Yes good messages go into the junk folder, in fact 99% of everything goes into the junk folder. I agree predicted good messages will then auto-train good in almost every case. No other junk plug-ins besides SpamSieve? What do you see in the Filters window? Nearly seventy five thousand spam messages came at me, but thanks to SpamSieve a mere 451 made it into my Inbox. (The exceptions, of course, are if you’ve disabled auto-training, disabled the whitelist, or trained a message from that address as spam.)Īnd are you saying that the messages SpamSieve predicts as good are going into the Junk folder? Under normal situations, a message that’s predicted good will be auto-trained as good, and then subsequent messages from that address will always be predicted good due to the whitelist. ![]()
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