![]() If a message isn’t moved, it’s because there was no rule with such an action whose conditions were satisfied. If a message is moved, it’s because Mail moved the message as a result of applying a rule action. SpamSieve scores and colors the messages instantly (from Mail’s point of view), and after that Mail handles essentially everything else. ![]() Second, there are no timing issues to worry about. To move the remaining spam messages to the Spam mailbox, you need to create a rule that matches their colors explicitly or that uses the “” catch-all. If there is no rule matching certain colors of spam messages, then those spams will be colored but not moved anywhere. It looks like SpamSieve is sometimes not acknowledging when I train a false positive. I dug through my log and I noticed something strange. Before I might get one a day in my inbox, but now I’m seeing six or seven, sometimes more. As you train SpamSieve’s filter, it increasingly identifies. If the message has the color (and the rest of the rule conditions match), then Mail applies the rule’s actions. Over the past few weeks Spam sieve has been letting more spam through than it has been. SpamSieve scores every word and some aspects of embedded images by how frequently they appear in messages marked as spam or ham. The purpose of the SpamSieve rules with the colors in the names is to match messages that have those colors (as a result of the scoring). ![]() However, I can start by clarifying a few things:įirst, the “ SpamSieve ” rule scores the mail and applies the colors. I’ll need you to be more specific about what your rules say I suspect that they might not be set up quite right. Is there a time lapse between when it scores, and then colors and then moves the spam mail? Or is it done as the mail downloads? If its not a time lapse issue (ie-my not waiting long enough for the app to do its job) then how can I fix this? It scores and colors them well, but it doesnt always move all the spam it has colored to the spam folder. Spam Sieve has had trouble with completing its task of moving mail to the spam folder. And mail has been able to handle seperating the reg inbox mail from the work mail. So far, the system has done a decent job of scoring and coloring mail. The rules are set up in the order of scoring mail, coloring mail (and then deliver mail. (So basicly, all mail heads towards my inbox and what ever is marked work goes to work inbox.) After which I have another rule that says “all mail with a to of move to mail box work”. on all messages and them moving the high scoring spam to the spam box. In Apple Mail (2.1 on OS X 10.4.7) I set up the SpamSieve rules as suggested for scoring spam and then seperating levels of spam - Blue, grey, purple, etc. ![]()
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