If you're looking for the easiest-to-use Mac-compatible spam utility on earth, look no farther than SpamSweep 1.5.3. Yet its
ease of use is a double-edged sword. While it's a cinch to set up and learn, it provides precious few options for configuring
its filters.
When you first launch the program, a setup assistant allows you to choose your e-mail client [Apple's Mail, Qualcomm's Eudora, Gyaz Square's GyazMail, Bare Bones Software's Mailsmith, Microsoft Entourage, CTM Development's PowerMail, and Mozilla's Thunderbird are supported] and provides an area for entering your e-mail account information. Once that is
done, SpamSweep attempts to log onto the ISP's POP and SMTP servers to confirm your settings.
SpamSweep downloads the first 100K of every e-mail message, filters it, provides options for making corrections, and, once
you've labeled your spam, deletes it from the server. You download the good e-mail that remains on the server when you connect
with your e-mail client (SpamSweep includes a command for launching the default e-mail client). It currently supports POP
accounts only.
Like other spam utilities, Spamsweep installs a blacklist consisting of multiple IP and domain names, builds a whitelist of
approved senders, and offers Bayesian filtering. The program provides no access to its blacklist, spam corpus (the collection
of words the Bayesian filter uses to identify spam), or filters. Like other utilities that include Bayesian filters, it learns
as it goes. Other than correcting it when it's wrong by identifying the validity of e-mail that it's filtered, you have no
options for adjusting its behavior.
The program ran well, and after a few days of training, it did a reasonable job separating the good from the bad e-mail. But
I'm a little uneasy about allowing an application other than my e-mail client to handle my messages, as some may be accidentally
deleted. For this reason, I prefer applications like C-Command's SpamSieve () and Intego's Personal Antispam X4 (), which
work within my e-mail client.
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