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REALITY CHECK
Dealing With Dumb Members
BETTER
 PRACTICES
Employee Recruitment and Retention
TOOLSHED
Recruitment or Retention
TECHNOLOGY
 TIPS
Spam Protection
POLICIES AND
 PRACTICES
Internet Usage
TEMPLATES PLUS
New Ideas or Challenges
Project Proposal Template
RELEVANT
 REVIEWS
Board Recruitment & Retention


 

 

 

IN THIS ISSUE
FRONT PAGE
FEATURE
Effective CEO Evaluation
VIEWPOINT
Is it Time for Whistleblower Protection in Associations?
ASSOCIATE ARTICLE
Look Out! Environmental Scanning for Associations
GUEST ARTICLE
Building Trust Between Boards and Staff

GUEST ARTICLE
Customer Service in Member Based Associations


GUEST ARTICLE
The Changing eStrategy Context for Associations


GUEST ARTICLE
How To Make New Members Feel Welcome


GUEST ARTICLE
Executive Coaches Offer Associations a New Game Plan
GUEST ARTICLE
A Virtual Success


REGULAR COLUMNS
Change Management with Peter de Jaeger

Customer Relationships with Paul Ward
TOOLS, TIPS AND RESOURCES
PAST ISSUES
TECHNOLOGY TIPS

Cheap and Effective Spam Protection

I recently installed a free spam filter called SpamBayes that works with MS Outlook (and many other e-mail clients as well, according to the SpamBayes site).  It is being developed as an open source project, and is free to download and use.

SpamBayes starts with a set of rules for identifying spam, and then modifies them based on training it receives from the user. It will start working immediately if it is given it a folder of spam and another folder of good e-mail.

It doesn't use blacklists (lists of bad e-mail senders) or whitelists (lists of good e-mail senders).  Instead, it uses statistical analysis to identify the e-mail message as spam, good e-mail, or suspect e-mail.  The good e-mail is then delivered to the appropriate Outlook folders as usual.  The spam is delivered to a Junk E-mail folder and the suspects to a Junk Suspects folder.

The user then further train SpamBayes:

  • for spam received as a good message or suspect message, clicking on "Delete as Spam" tells SpamBayes to treat it as spam next time.

  • for good messages delivered to the Suspect folder, clicking on "Recover from Spam"  ensures that future similar messages are treated as good e-mail.

It has produced very few false-positives and catches almost all spam. I don't think I have had a single message go into the Junk E-mail (i.e. spam) folder that was not spam....and I receive hundreds of good messages and hundreds of spam messages.

SpamBayes installs easily into Outlook, and is great for the non-techie.  I have no experience with how it works for other e-mail clients, but I expect it would work just as well.  It can be downloaded from http://spambayes.sourceforge.net/

Wayne Amundson is president of Association Xpertise Inc., a consulting firm serving associations and non-profits. He is also a writer and speaker on association and non-profit management and governance, and is editor of The Canadian Association e-zine and co-author of the new “Primer for Directors of Not-for-Profit Corporations” published by the Industry Canada and three non-profit umbrella groups in Canada. 
Phone: 403-374-1822 E-mail: admin@axi.ca  Website: www.axi.ca 

Association Xpertise Inc. (AXI) is a full-service company providing consulting and other services to associations and non-profits.    Details

 

MAY 2004
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