Hello!
I also think that there are no Spamhalter entries in the raw view you could evaluate for filtering rules. As far as I understand Spamhalter, there is a simple "yes"-"no"-classifying: a message is either good (no spam) or evil (spam), but there is no intermediate classification.
You may want to use an external spam plassification program. POPFile is one of them, also able to classify incoming messages in "buckets". As usual, setting up a Bayes filter tool needs some training (and in case of POPFile: the mroe buckets you have, the moren training it needs); and an external program needs to have a link between itself and Pegasus Mail (i.e. you have to edit Pegasus Mail's POP3-settings, as far as I know).
In short: this would mean some extra work, so you have to think about whether your goal justifies that.
A German-speaking manual for POPFile can be found here: http://popfile.sourceforge.net/manual/de/manual.html.
Hello!
I also think that there are no Spamhalter entries in the raw view you could evaluate for filtering rules. As far as I understand Spamhalter, there is a simple "yes"-"no"-classifying: a message is either good (no spam) or evil (spam), but there is no intermediate classification.
You may want to use an external spam plassification program. POPFile is one of them, also able to classify incoming messages in "buckets". As usual, setting up a Bayes filter tool needs some training (and in case of POPFile: the mroe buckets you have, the moren training it needs); and an external program needs to have a link between itself and Pegasus Mail (i.e. you have to edit Pegasus Mail's POP3-settings, as far as I know).
In short: this would mean some extra work, so you have to think about whether your goal justifies that.
A German-speaking manual for POPFile can be found here: <A href="http://popfile.sourceforge.net/manual/de/manual.html" mce_href="http://popfile.sourceforge.net/manual/de/manual.html" target="_blank">http://popfile.sourceforge.net/manual/de/manual.html</A>.