11 projects tagged "SPAM"
Avelsieve is a Squirrelmail plugin for creating Sieve scripts on a Sieve-compliant (RFC 5228) mail server. Sieve is a mail filtering language intended for server-side filtering of email messages. Avelsieve provides a user-friendly interface for adding and manipulating mail filtering rules.
ClamAV Unofficial Signatures Updater is a script that provides a simple way to download, test, and use third-party ClamAV signatures. It checks for updated unofficial clamav signature database files and can download them. It randomizes download time to help distribute the load more evenly for the database host mirror sites. Signature bypass entries can be created for temporarily resolving false-positive issues with third-party signatures. It can report which mirror site a download came from. It reports if a downloaded database is actually different than the running copy. Many other features are supported.
Rspamd is an anti-spam system designed to work faster than SpamAssassin by using event model and regular expression optimization. Currently released features: regexp rules for filtering different parts of messages; a number of built-in functions for analyzing messages; fuzzy hashes support; SURBL filters; email and character tables support; a control interface for remote managing and stats gathering; a Perl and Lua plugin system; statistics support (OSB/Winnow); compatibility with SpamAssassin; and a client program for email scanning. With similar rules, rspamd is about ten times faster than SpamAssassin.
Using email storage in single folders makes it hard to train DSPAM. Sending email to the spam@mydomain.com alias works, but a more user-friendly system is needed. Additionally, since Mozilla Mail (Thunderbird) does a good job with 'Junk', it would be useful to process all user files for 'Junk' in their home directories. This small program grabs the DSPAM signatures of each email in the files provided and feeds them to DSPAM.
Spampig DnsblCheck takes the IP address of a mail server and looks it up in common blacklists and whitelists. The program tests against the major block lists from Spamhaus, SORBS, Spamcop, Barracuda, UCEProtect, and others. In addition to blacklists, it also checks against IP address and domain name whitelists and even checks PTR record integrity. The program returns results quickly, typically in less than a few seconds. If you don't get results quickly, it indicates you may have DNS problems and knowing this can also be useful. This application can be useful to spam fighters and email users who are struggling to find out why their messages are being blocked.
Clement is an email server application. Its main function is to block unwanted mail (spam) as soon as possible in the email exchange process. It accepts or rejects email while the SMTP session, initiated by the email sender, is still pending, accepting legitimate email messages without the need to return an error status to non-existent or "borrowed" return address later. Clement can operate in two modes. Either the mail is taken into account locally and stored in the recipient's own area, or it can transmit the mail to an another SMTP server (Sendmail, Postfix, Exim, Exchange, etc.). Each email domain name Clement knows about can be treated in one of these two modes depending on the group to which the domain name has been set. Each message is verified by a virus scanner (ClamAV) while the SMTP connection is still open, but the refusal of mail and the reason for refusal is notified to the actual sender. Mail management is done via a Web interface and can be delegated to three administrative levels (Root-Admin, Group-Admin, Domain-Admin). Standard users can access their own logs (sent email status, email rejected, quarantined email, etc.). With this interface, the user can handle the rejection and acceptance of mail. Users who are level "Admin" can access the session logs (via the Web interface). Clement uses a SQL database (PostgreSQL, MySQL) to store and manage logs, user profiles, and dynamic management of directives concerning the sender-receiver relationship.
Jaro Mail is an integrated suite of interoperable tools for GNU/Linux and Apple/OS X to manage email communication in a private way, without relying on online services (in fact, encouraging users to store email locally). It mainly features a system for mailinglist filtering, address-book integrated whitelisting, and long-term email storage and archiving with functions for fast search and usage statistics. It makes internal use of customized versions of popular Unix tools like Mutt, Fetchmail, Procmail, Mairix, and Msmtp.
A CentOS based server virtualization solution supporting both OpenVZ and KVM hypervisors.