![]() ![]() I had made a huge filter in Mailsmith, but I had to keep modifying it,Īnd it started to become unmaintainable. So that we didn’t lose mail when people mistyped addresses.) So I had to make the ATPM mail server bounce all messages that It rose much higher (5000/day) in the interim, and Tsai: I was thinking about spam a lot before Graham published his paper,īecause I was getting more than a thousand spams a day. Were thinking about before Paul Graham published “ A Plan for Spam”? Gruber: When did you get the idea to write SpamSieve? Was it something you (Safari users: Use the Reload Page command to force Safari to update its cached version of this site’s CSS style sheet trust me, the interview will look much better.) Needless to say, I highly recommend SpamSieve. SpamSieve is easy to set up, runs quickly, and works with every major Mac OS X email client except Apple Mail (it even works with Claris Emailer). I’ve been using SpamSieve 2 for over a month (including beta releases), and its efficacy has bordered on the incredible: flagging all but 10 of 1981 spams. SpamSieve includes several types of filtering strategies, most especially a Bayesian statistical filter. His latest software release is SpamSieve 2, a major update to his US$25 spam filtering utility. Michael is also the editor and publisher of the monthly Mac e-zine About This Particular Macintosh, and he writes a Mac-oriented weblog. Michael Tsai is a Macintosh software developer who has authored several useful utilities, including DropDMG and BBAutoComplete. Interview: Michael Tsai Wednesday, 24 September 2003 ![]()
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