Book Image

SpamAssassin: A practical guide to integration and configuration

Book Image

SpamAssassin: A practical guide to integration and configuration

Overview of this book

As a busy administrator, you know Spam is a major distraction in todays network. The effects range from inappropriate content arriving in the mailboxes up to contact email addresses placed on a website being deluged with unsolicited mail, causing valid enquiries and sales leads to be lost and wasting employee time. The perception of the problem of spam is as big as the reality. In response to the growing problem of spam, a number of free and commercial applications and services have been developed to help network administrators and email users combat spam. Its up to you to choose and then get the most out of an antispam solution. Free to use, flexible, and effective, SpamAssassin has become the most popular open source antispam application. Its unique combination of power and flexibility make it the right choice. This book will now help you set up and optimize SpamAssassin for your network.
Table of Contents (24 chapters)
SpamAssassin
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
Introduction
Glossary

Chapter 17. Email Clients

SpamAssassin does not remove spam email from the user’s inbox; it only adds additional headers to tag email messages. Another part of the email delivery process performs the sorting. For sites that can use procmail, users or system administrators can filter spam into a folder automatically, as described in Chapter 8.

By moving spam to a different folder, we ensure that users do not view the spam unless they choose to. Their inbox is then free of spam, yet the spam can be browsed if desired. This is an important fallback in case legitimate email is incorrectly categorized as spam.

The email client that the user uses to view and create emails can often be used to filter spam. To do this, it has to be able to selectively move incoming messages to a separate folder depending on the data in particular email headers. Most popular email clients include this ability. This chapter will cover configuring email clients such as Microsoft Outlook, Microsoft Outlook Express, Mozilla...