![]() In fact, at this point, about 70% I am having to “train” to go into the Spam folder. However, this email still sits in the Inbox. Subject: Be ahead of your New Year’s resolution, start burning belly-fat now Please see the Checking the Airmail Setup instructions, which show how you can look in SpamSieve’s log to see whether it’s receiving any messages from Airmail. It could mean that Airmail is not filtering the incoming messages through SpamSieve. That doesn’t necessarily mean that the training isn’t working. Please describe which ones apply to your situation. The original poster mentioned several different issues. SS just doesn’t seem to be all that effective either at training or catching obvious junk now. I would say you have described my issues perfectly in recent months. My son is using the same version of airmail as I. When I did the training, I saw the stats go up and it went into log, then a few hours later, the same thing, it becomes useless.įor the record, I have licensed 3 copies of SS, for myself, my son on airmail and my wife on mailemate. So I did a complete uninstall of SS and all of its files. I can even select and train as spam and airmail moves them, but the stats counter doesn’t change on spam sieve and the log is empty, there are no Train (manuals) in there. I have used SS for a long time successfully, but in the last month or so, it just stops working, and junk gets through. I am running Airmail 2 Beta, but went to Airmail 2 stable to make sure it was not an issue. In the meantime, our utmost thanks for making this the best spam filter on the Mac platform.I am on 10.10.3, and this was also occurring on 10.10.2. If you could answer the folder question above and include a link to that tutorial so I and others may refresh ourselves, it would be appreciated. I realize you posted a very good setup tutorial for AirMail. I would like a folder for all my spam mail to show up in, just in case something is wrongly flagged as spam. ![]() None of that, as far as I can see, is being done in AirMail. So, the question is, where does all the Spam mail go? In Apple Mail you actually have to create a Spam Mail folder and a rule to send SpamSieve flagged spam there. I have the latest version of SpamSieve installed, I launch AirMail, and it seems that there are options (Train as good or spam) available to me when I right click on a email message. It seems as if I don’t have to go through the setup process I had with Apple Mail. Trying to figure out how to use SpamSieve with the AirMail application. I am finally attempting to replace Apple Mail with AirMail. Of course, not your fault – it was getting the AirMail team to allow coded support. ![]() I know we have come a long way with getting SpamSieve finally compatible with AirMail. ![]()
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