![]() Juani on How To Disable the Quicken Registration Prompt.Prasanna on Enter dates into a date picker for Chrome and Firefox.Mike on How To Disable the Quicken Registration Prompt.Ray on How To Disable the Quicken Registration Prompt.Pam on How To Disable the Quicken Registration Prompt.Suzanna J on How To Disable the Quicken Registration Prompt. ![]() I'm in LA on How To Disable the Quicken Registration Prompt.Janet on How To Disable the Quicken Registration Prompt.□ Paying for computer cycles likes it’s 1969.□️ Having some fun with AI Image Generation.⌘ Keyboard Maestro for Windows – RoboTask?.□♂️ The relevance of Microsoft Office?.⌘ Keyboard Maestro for Windows – Macro Toolworks?.□ Good grief, how unstable is Windows? POS.I’ve now got two problems, I’m wasting my time with spam, and wasting my time with the spam filtering tool.ġ,055,701 Ads blocked and 269,762 Trackers blocked for 61.64 GB saved, since June 4, 2020. ![]() Does it rely on the “corpus” to scan incoming messages? Does it have far more advanced heuristics? Hopefully this is my goof and misunderstanding and we can get back on track. I’m willing to correct the rules and try again, but I wonder what the point of SpamSieve is. SpamSieve is on borrowed time, BuhoCleaner is revving up as we speak. But, what the hell is the point of training an app if I have to make adjustments to all the rules myself? How is this better than the built in mail rules? If I have to fix everything SpamSieve does, why not just make the rules myself? This is the exact waste of time I was looking to prevent. I’ll need to edit and delete about 90% of these, change is equal to to contains or use some RegEx magic. Maybe this is bad training on my part, maybe this is exactly how it works, but I’m not impressed. SpamSieve, what are you doing? Why are you so stupid? This is the “trainable” aspect? You have a database of 730 pointless rules. The rule isn’t going to work unless I get the exact same email, from the exact same address. That problem persists for other fields, for example there are dozens of rules where the subject is equal to followed by a load of gibberish. Obviously the From field will never be the same thing twice. Take the use of address: a useless set of rules. The rules are set to use is equal to for way too many fields. In looking at the Blocklist, I see why there are over 700 entries. There are two problems, there was a misconfiguration on my part, and the rules are overly specific. Even though it has 730+ blocklist rules, and filtered over 73k words, not a single message has been flagged as spam. If you ever wanted to know if something was worth it, here's one occasion where you can actually know the answer: TQ White II, computer ace, has used this software for years and says, "It works like a miracle."Īnd that information, my friends, is a gift.In my battle against the hundreds of spam messages I’m getting, I’ve installed SpamSieve, because the reviews say you train it to block all types of spam.Īfter flagging over 500 messages as spam, SpamSieve has blocked exactly zero (0). SpanSieve costs thirty bucks but it is the best thirty bucks you will ever spend. If you set up your email right (imap!), SpamSieve running on your main Mac will remove the spam from your iPhone, too. Like, five times in my life after the first few weeks of a new installation. Well, by "does happen", I mean, I can recall some incidents. I review the discard folder every once in awhile to see if it is mad at anyone I like. I'll check the SpamSieve discard folder and, there they are, out of sight. ![]() The next day there might still be a couple. Eeek! I say to myself and I will point out their spammyness to SpamSieve. ![]() All of a sudden the spamsters will get a new idea and I will see a bunch of spam. Actually, a whole other category of spam disappears. Then, I tell SpamSieve that I don't like them and they disappear. Yesterday, I got 104 spam email messages and that's pretty much every day for me.īut, I use SpamSieve so I never see any of them. I use it to sign up for stuff, on blog posts, everywhere. I have been using the same email address since the middle nineties. It makes more sense here than on any of my other blogs.) Macintosh using friends, if you are not using SpamSieve, your life can be better. (I usually focus on programming topics here but, having recently built a new computer and watched the miracle that is SpamSieve's Bayesian filtering, I wanted to make my enthusiasm available to the internet in the hopes that the SpamSieve people enjoy greater success and that some people will stop living in spam hell. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |