![]() ![]() * Can use the Habeas SafeList, which indicates messages that are Not Spam, as well as the “ADV” subject tag indicating that a message is spam. It is the latter situation that is the most problematic with any spam filter. Spam filters err in one of two ways: they either incorrectly mark spam as legitimate email (false negative) or they wrongly classify legitimate email as spam (false positive). The rules can match text in a variety of ways, including using regular expressions. The problem with SpamSieve, as with any spam filter, is that it is not 100 accurate. ![]() * You can customize the whitelist and blocklist, adding sophisticated rules that match various message headers, or the message body. * Automatically maintains a whitelist to guarantee that messages from particular senders or mailing lists are never marked as spam, without cluttering your address book with these addresses. * Automatically maintains a blocklist so that it can instantly adapt to spam messages sent from particular addresses, and catch 100% of them. * Integrates with the Mac OS X Address Book (and also Eudora’s and Entourage’s address books) so that messages from friends and colleagues are never marked as spam. Plus, you get the same great filtering if you ever switch e-mail clients or use more than one at a time. * Integrates with your e-mail client for a superior user experience. Some other e-mail clients include Bayesian filters, but SpamSieve is more accurate. It adapts to the mail that you receive to get even better with time. * Powerful Bayesian spam filtering results in high accuracy and almost no false positives. By learning from the very messages that you receive, SpamSieve is able to block nearly all of your spam, without putting your good messages in the spam mailbox. Other spam filters get worse over time as spammers ADAPT to their rules SpamSieve actually gets better over time as it adapts to your mail. This has all started happening after I installed SpamSieve today. Apple mail shows two Archive folders and if I open the spam folder, the message disappears and moves to the Archive folder. I have a separate spam folders designated for Exchange and Gmail accts. it is quick and easy to control SpamSieve from within your mail client, and you can customize how it interacts with the rest of your message sorting rules. Since setting up SpamSieve, spam only transiently appears in spam folder. SpamSieve gives you back your inbox by bringing powerful Bayesian spam filtering to Mac e-mail clients. ![]()
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