Help me here. (I am not a programmer or computer geek, so need to beg your indulgence). The Whitelist is automatically populated only when you send a message TO somebody. So the spoofed addresses in the emails will not be reflected in the Whitelist, and will be passed on through to the Spamhalter filter. This is unable to recognise them because every field, and the entire address track in the header is spoofed. So Spamhalter will pass it on. It is basically impossible to create a spam filter because the addresses are different every time, so the messages will drop through this also. Finally, they are subjected to the rules-based scan, and it was here that I was trying to intercept them.
What I did was create a large (500 entries!) distribution list, (using the addresses from my whitelist, (which represents only addresses to which I have sent mail)). I then went to the Mail Filtering Rules and created a General Rule Set of type List Scan, ticked the box for NOT, and told it to hive off messages not in the list to a folder, "Phishing". The list scan option examines the From and Reply To fields in incoming messages (?) and triggers the action chosen in the rule definition.
It doesn't work. The messages pass through this Rule, and continue to come up in my new mail. Can you point out the flaw in my logic?
<p>Help me here.&nbsp; (I am not a programmer or computer geek, so need to beg your indulgence).&nbsp; The Whitelist is automatically populated only when you send a message <u>TO</u> somebody.&nbsp; So the spoofed addresses in the emails will not be reflected in the Whitelist, and will be passed on through to the Spamhalter filter.&nbsp; This is unable to recognise them because every field, and the entire address track in the header is spoofed.&nbsp; So Spamhalter will pass it on.&nbsp; It is basically impossible to create a spam filter because the addresses are different every time, so the messages will drop through this also.&nbsp; Finally, they are subjected to the rules-based scan, and it was here that I was trying to intercept them.</p><p>What I did was create a large (500 entries!) distribution list, (using the addresses from my whitelist, (which represents only addresses to which I have sent mail)).&nbsp; I then went to the Mail Filtering Rules and created a General Rule Set of type List Scan, ticked the box for NOT, and told it to hive off messages <u>not</u> in the list to a folder, "Phishing". The list scan option examines the From and Reply To fields in incoming messages (?) and triggers the action chosen in the rule definition.
</p><p> It doesn't work.&nbsp; The messages pass through this Rule, and continue to come up in my new mail.&nbsp; Can you point out the flaw in my logic?
</p>