Can I download matured Thunderbird junk training.dat file from any reliable source [closed]
I think it will take time for me to train default junk filter in Thunderbird. Is there any matured training.dat file available which I can download and place in profile directory?
thunderbird
closed as off-topic by mikewhatever, αғsнιη, Charles Green, guntbert, Thomas Dec 28 '18 at 12:48
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
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I think it will take time for me to train default junk filter in Thunderbird. Is there any matured training.dat file available which I can download and place in profile directory?
thunderbird
closed as off-topic by mikewhatever, αғsнιη, Charles Green, guntbert, Thomas Dec 28 '18 at 12:48
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "This is not about Ubuntu. Questions about other Linux distributions can be asked on Unix & Linux, those about Windows on Super User, those about Apple products on Ask Different and generic programming questions on Stack Overflow." – mikewhatever, Charles Green, guntbert, Thomas
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
add a comment |
I think it will take time for me to train default junk filter in Thunderbird. Is there any matured training.dat file available which I can download and place in profile directory?
thunderbird
I think it will take time for me to train default junk filter in Thunderbird. Is there any matured training.dat file available which I can download and place in profile directory?
thunderbird
thunderbird
asked Dec 27 '18 at 15:33
bluerayblueray
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158111
closed as off-topic by mikewhatever, αғsнιη, Charles Green, guntbert, Thomas Dec 28 '18 at 12:48
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "This is not about Ubuntu. Questions about other Linux distributions can be asked on Unix & Linux, those about Windows on Super User, those about Apple products on Ask Different and generic programming questions on Stack Overflow." – mikewhatever, Charles Green, guntbert, Thomas
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
closed as off-topic by mikewhatever, αғsнιη, Charles Green, guntbert, Thomas Dec 28 '18 at 12:48
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "This is not about Ubuntu. Questions about other Linux distributions can be asked on Unix & Linux, those about Windows on Super User, those about Apple products on Ask Different and generic programming questions on Stack Overflow." – mikewhatever, Charles Green, guntbert, Thomas
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
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1 Answer
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If by "reliable source" you mean someone you know and trust, then the answer is yes. Just copy the file from their profile.
If you mean a 3rd party with a good reputation and an trusted SSL certficate, then, no.
And it would be out of date, and really hard to maintain, anyway, given how fast spam attacks morph.
A good time-saver is to copy a corpus of known spam in mbox format to your tbird machine, and train your filter with that. This is what I usually do. I have a "spam catcher" account I maintain at google. I log on to that account and use the "copy to" function of tbird to copy the latest 30 days of junk into my new (client's) inbox and then mark it all as spam. Presto -- trained on 30 days of recent junk.
General reference (no, it is a bad idea to paste the contents here).
http://kb.mozillazine.org/Junk_Mail_Controls
But I doubt this is the correct forum for the question -- superuser maybe?
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
If by "reliable source" you mean someone you know and trust, then the answer is yes. Just copy the file from their profile.
If you mean a 3rd party with a good reputation and an trusted SSL certficate, then, no.
And it would be out of date, and really hard to maintain, anyway, given how fast spam attacks morph.
A good time-saver is to copy a corpus of known spam in mbox format to your tbird machine, and train your filter with that. This is what I usually do. I have a "spam catcher" account I maintain at google. I log on to that account and use the "copy to" function of tbird to copy the latest 30 days of junk into my new (client's) inbox and then mark it all as spam. Presto -- trained on 30 days of recent junk.
General reference (no, it is a bad idea to paste the contents here).
http://kb.mozillazine.org/Junk_Mail_Controls
But I doubt this is the correct forum for the question -- superuser maybe?
add a comment |
If by "reliable source" you mean someone you know and trust, then the answer is yes. Just copy the file from their profile.
If you mean a 3rd party with a good reputation and an trusted SSL certficate, then, no.
And it would be out of date, and really hard to maintain, anyway, given how fast spam attacks morph.
A good time-saver is to copy a corpus of known spam in mbox format to your tbird machine, and train your filter with that. This is what I usually do. I have a "spam catcher" account I maintain at google. I log on to that account and use the "copy to" function of tbird to copy the latest 30 days of junk into my new (client's) inbox and then mark it all as spam. Presto -- trained on 30 days of recent junk.
General reference (no, it is a bad idea to paste the contents here).
http://kb.mozillazine.org/Junk_Mail_Controls
But I doubt this is the correct forum for the question -- superuser maybe?
add a comment |
If by "reliable source" you mean someone you know and trust, then the answer is yes. Just copy the file from their profile.
If you mean a 3rd party with a good reputation and an trusted SSL certficate, then, no.
And it would be out of date, and really hard to maintain, anyway, given how fast spam attacks morph.
A good time-saver is to copy a corpus of known spam in mbox format to your tbird machine, and train your filter with that. This is what I usually do. I have a "spam catcher" account I maintain at google. I log on to that account and use the "copy to" function of tbird to copy the latest 30 days of junk into my new (client's) inbox and then mark it all as spam. Presto -- trained on 30 days of recent junk.
General reference (no, it is a bad idea to paste the contents here).
http://kb.mozillazine.org/Junk_Mail_Controls
But I doubt this is the correct forum for the question -- superuser maybe?
If by "reliable source" you mean someone you know and trust, then the answer is yes. Just copy the file from their profile.
If you mean a 3rd party with a good reputation and an trusted SSL certficate, then, no.
And it would be out of date, and really hard to maintain, anyway, given how fast spam attacks morph.
A good time-saver is to copy a corpus of known spam in mbox format to your tbird machine, and train your filter with that. This is what I usually do. I have a "spam catcher" account I maintain at google. I log on to that account and use the "copy to" function of tbird to copy the latest 30 days of junk into my new (client's) inbox and then mark it all as spam. Presto -- trained on 30 days of recent junk.
General reference (no, it is a bad idea to paste the contents here).
http://kb.mozillazine.org/Junk_Mail_Controls
But I doubt this is the correct forum for the question -- superuser maybe?
answered Dec 27 '18 at 16:13
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