MacSTAC was founded on April 1, 1978 as an Apple II MUG. We are a community group with members from all walks of life, careers and levels of ability. We welcome all Mac users to improve their knowledge and, in turn, share their Mac knowledge with others. http://macstac.org

Thursday, March 30, 2006

SpamSieve improves spam removal accuracy

C-Command has released SpamSieve v2.4.3, an update to its Bayesian spam filtering software for Mac OS X e-mail clients. A free update for registered users, SpamSieve costs $25 to register.

SpamSieve removes unsolicited commercial e-mail (spam) from e-mail clients including Apple’s Mail, Emailer, Entourage, Eudora, GyazMail, Mailsmith, Outlook Express 5 and PowerMail. It employs Bayesian filtering characteristics to figure out spam from good e-mail (ham), then gets the spam out of the way.

New to this release is improved accuracy — SpamSieve has been adapted to counteract various spammer tricks. A training delay in conjunction with Apple’s Mail has been removed; Entourage scripts now report progress partway through bulk trainings; Grown notifications now include the To: address header; An Intel-related problem related to SpamSieve’s corpus has been fixed (SpamSieve has already been updated with a Universal Binary), and other improvements have been made.

System requirements call for Mac OS X v10.2 or later and a compatible e-mail client (listed above). A 30-day trial version is available for download.

SpamSieve gives you back your inbox by bringing powerful Bayesian spam filtering to Mac e-mail clients. It’s 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. 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. 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.

http://c-command.com/spamsieve/




No comments:

Visitors

Visitors

Blog Archive