Hello!
I have been using The Bat! with AVG for some months now and have just upgraded my AVG to include the Anti-Spam filter. Previously I used several spam filters (Spam Assassin and PopFile) which are located prior to TB in the email delivery chain. Although these tools work reasonably well, they have the disadvantage that they must be maintained separately (whitelists, training etc) which is cumbersome and unreliable. I am hoping that by using The Bat! with one or more anti-spam plugins, I will be able to do all of the maintenance from one place (The Bat!). What I currently have is AVG's anti-spam plug-in loaded and configured in TB. I am considering adding another plugin if that improves performance (considering Anti-Spam Sniper based on forum postings here). So, here are my questions:
1. Is there any way to maintain just one whitelist that can be used by multiple anti-spam plugins? If so, how? The way it appears now is that to access a whitelist, I have to select the particular plugin and click on configure, which brings me to the whitelist for just that plugin. AVG supports import from a text file, but don't know if any other plugins support this. Has anyone found a way to consolidate whitelist maintenance?
2. Is there any way to make the spam score for an email show in the junk email folder? Before I choose cut-offs for deletion vs. filtering of spam I would like to have an idea of how high the false positives are scoring. It would also be really nice to be able to sort the junk email by increasing spam-score so the ones most likely to be false positives have some chance of floating to the top of the bin....
3. If I configure TB to automatically delete spam above a certain score, does that get deleted for real or sent to the trash bin? I'm concerned about false positives and hence somewhat reluctant to use this feature without first being able to see what the false positive rate would be.
4. What is the Special menu item "Mark as Not Junk" supposed to do? Please pardon me if it sounds like a stupid question but it's not obvious. I sent myself a test email which got put in the junk email folder and I selected "Mark as Not Junk" and nothing seemed to happen. Is this training the AVG Anti-Spam filter when I select this? My initial assumption would be that this would move the message back into my inbox, and this is the behavior I would hope for. In fact I can move it there myself and it stays there, but why doesn't it go there by itself just from marking not junk? I noticed someone on the forum said this is because it would be refiltered but that doesn't make sense to me since I am able to get the result manually so it should be possible to program the result, too. More generally, is it possible to configure the actions taken when I select "mark as not junk"?
5. When I receive an email which is marked as junk but is not junk (a false positive) it would be incredibly convenient to be able to right click on it and add the sender to my universal whitelist. Is any such thing possible or envisioned? Along the same lines it would be great if the marking as not junk could automatically train the plugins (does it currently do so?).
6. I tried to train AVG Anti-spam but it wanted me to exit TB first. Is this the only way to train it or does it get trained from my marking "Junk" and "Not Junk" in TB?
7. The documentation for TB says that it comes with BayesIt Anti-spam filter, but discussion on the forum seems to indicate this is no longer so and I don't see it listed in the anti-spam plugins, so I assume there is no longer any anti-spam plugin that ships with TB. Would be great to update the documentation to match current behavior. Or do I need to manually download new documentation?
8. I asked the AVG plugin to write [spam] in the subject and it seems to do so twice. Do I have something misconfigured? Has anyone seen this behavior?
9. I think the ideal anti-spam tool would have very intimate integration with the mailer so that all configuration and maintenance happens in one place, preferably by a keystroke or right-click on the email selected. It looks like TB is moving in this direction and I hope it is possible to get there, even though different authors write the plugins....
Thanks, in advance, for any illumination on these points....
I have been using The Bat! with AVG for some months now and have just upgraded my AVG to include the Anti-Spam filter. Previously I used several spam filters (Spam Assassin and PopFile) which are located prior to TB in the email delivery chain. Although these tools work reasonably well, they have the disadvantage that they must be maintained separately (whitelists, training etc) which is cumbersome and unreliable. I am hoping that by using The Bat! with one or more anti-spam plugins, I will be able to do all of the maintenance from one place (The Bat!). What I currently have is AVG's anti-spam plug-in loaded and configured in TB. I am considering adding another plugin if that improves performance (considering Anti-Spam Sniper based on forum postings here). So, here are my questions:
1. Is there any way to maintain just one whitelist that can be used by multiple anti-spam plugins? If so, how? The way it appears now is that to access a whitelist, I have to select the particular plugin and click on configure, which brings me to the whitelist for just that plugin. AVG supports import from a text file, but don't know if any other plugins support this. Has anyone found a way to consolidate whitelist maintenance?
2. Is there any way to make the spam score for an email show in the junk email folder? Before I choose cut-offs for deletion vs. filtering of spam I would like to have an idea of how high the false positives are scoring. It would also be really nice to be able to sort the junk email by increasing spam-score so the ones most likely to be false positives have some chance of floating to the top of the bin....
3. If I configure TB to automatically delete spam above a certain score, does that get deleted for real or sent to the trash bin? I'm concerned about false positives and hence somewhat reluctant to use this feature without first being able to see what the false positive rate would be.
4. What is the Special menu item "Mark as Not Junk" supposed to do? Please pardon me if it sounds like a stupid question but it's not obvious. I sent myself a test email which got put in the junk email folder and I selected "Mark as Not Junk" and nothing seemed to happen. Is this training the AVG Anti-Spam filter when I select this? My initial assumption would be that this would move the message back into my inbox, and this is the behavior I would hope for. In fact I can move it there myself and it stays there, but why doesn't it go there by itself just from marking not junk? I noticed someone on the forum said this is because it would be refiltered but that doesn't make sense to me since I am able to get the result manually so it should be possible to program the result, too. More generally, is it possible to configure the actions taken when I select "mark as not junk"?
5. When I receive an email which is marked as junk but is not junk (a false positive) it would be incredibly convenient to be able to right click on it and add the sender to my universal whitelist. Is any such thing possible or envisioned? Along the same lines it would be great if the marking as not junk could automatically train the plugins (does it currently do so?).
6. I tried to train AVG Anti-spam but it wanted me to exit TB first. Is this the only way to train it or does it get trained from my marking "Junk" and "Not Junk" in TB?
7. The documentation for TB says that it comes with BayesIt Anti-spam filter, but discussion on the forum seems to indicate this is no longer so and I don't see it listed in the anti-spam plugins, so I assume there is no longer any anti-spam plugin that ships with TB. Would be great to update the documentation to match current behavior. Or do I need to manually download new documentation?
8. I asked the AVG plugin to write [spam] in the subject and it seems to do so twice. Do I have something misconfigured? Has anyone seen this behavior?
9. I think the ideal anti-spam tool would have very intimate integration with the mailer so that all configuration and maintenance happens in one place, preferably by a keystroke or right-click on the email selected. It looks like TB is moving in this direction and I hope it is possible to get there, even though different authors write the plugins....
Thanks, in advance, for any illumination on these points....