[CentOS-docs] subscribed wiki pages
Akemi Yagi
amyagi at gmail.com
Mon Dec 10 11:14:11 UTC 2007
On Dec 10, 2007 1:36 AM, Ralph Angenendt <ra+centos at br-online.de> wrote:
> Akemi Yagi wrote:
> > Sorry, I spoke too soon. Just checked the spam filter implemented by
> > my work place and the e-mail was trapped there. It was caught
> > probably because of utf-8 characters on the subject line and/or the
> > sender name "noreply".
>
> Hmm?
>
> As Tim's mail showed, moin goes out of it's way to *not* put utf-8 data
> into the subject line, but to encode it, so that it is 7bit clean.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Ralph
OK, to see how the trapped e-mail was analyzed, I went to see the
report section of the filter:
=== Spam Analysis Report (Score = 3.2) ===
0.6 NO_REAL_NAME From: does not include a real name
0.1 COMBINED_FROM From address suggests this is spam
0.0 SUBJECT_EXCESS_QP Subject: quoted-printable encoded unnecessarily
0 SPF query returned 'none'
Custom Rule 24: (2.5 points) sender contains noreply
[Note: done by our network guy]
Word: Password (0.079)
Word: password+please (0.060)
Word: password+Login (0.054)
Word: email+lost (0.054)
Word: s*Wiki (0.041)
Word: lost+password (0.035)
Word: use+data (0.031)
Word: use+copy (0.027)
Word: requested+submit (0.020)
Word: Login+Name (0.013)
Word: wiki+centos (0.010)
Word: UserPreferences (0.010)
Word: s*wiki (0.010)
Word: centos (0.010)
Word: password+field (0.010)
Score of 0 points due to statistical analysis
=== end of report ===
However, my real interest is not the filter issue. I have already
whitelisted centos.org. But thing is I have yet to confirm the change
notice e-mail gets sent to me. To increase the chance, I have added
several more pages to the subscribed list. So someday one of those
pages will be edited and I will get the answer to this question.
Akemi
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