Often this email is advertising various enhancement drugs, porn, or someone from South Africa saying they are the benefactor of a bajillionaire and have picked YOU as their heir (just give them your bank account number). That is what SPAM is – email you receive (for whatever reason) that you don’t want. The advertisements, the offers for credit cards…those wasted resources that always get tossed without reading. You can think of SPAM as all of those useless flyers you get in the mail. This article will assume you already have Postfix up and running.īefore we get into the dirty bits of the installation, I thought it would be wise to describe SPAM and how SPAM is scored with Spamassassin. Like the previous article, this installation will be done on a Ubuntu Server 10.04 release. SPAMASSASSIN SPAM SCORE HOW TOAnd in this article I am going to show you how to add Spamassassin to your already working Postfix mail server. It’s reliable, trustworthy, and simple to install and configure. Spamassassin uses numbers tests (both local and on line) to determine if a mail is SPAM or HAM (not SPAM). But how do you stop it? The best way? Spamassassin. The last thing you need is to be serving all your users plate after plate of SPAM delight. The problem is, if you have a mail server, you can almost guarantee that SPAM will find its way in (and out if your not careful). But wait – who WANTS to serve up SPAM? No one (at least no one with good intentions). That mail server will work so well it’ll server up all the email and SPAM you want. After following that article you should have a working, reliable mail server. In my last article I introduced you to the installation and configuration of a Postfix mail server (see “ Install and configure a Postfix mail server“).
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