POPFile Installed on OS X

Written by Ken Edwards
Published October 30, 2003

I cannot express in words how happy I am. A picture is worth a thousand words right? How many words is a dynamic picture worth? Using these instructions you too can be as SPAM free as I, all while running Mac OS X. Special Thanks to Neil Lee on his help on the config.in file. Just a warning. This requires the instillation of the Developer Tools, which comes with OS X these days. The new version of POPFile uses the BerklyDB perl module, these files need to be compiled. But don't fret, this is very easy to do even if you are a nOOb at the command line. If all goes well you can just copy the commands from Neil's site and paste them into the Terminal.

The end result is more then worth the hassle. Let me say that again. The end result of running POPFile on Mac OS X is more then worth the hassle of compiling some files in the command line. Why? POPFile offers a superior bayesian SPAM filtering system with "buckets" and "magnets" to provide the best SPAM filtering system known to man.

Mac OS X Mail does not have bayesian filtering in it (score one for Outlook 2003, that is IF you want to pay the steep upgrade fee) and that is not good enough for me. Mac OS X Mail is pretty good after you train it for a while. But it is nowhere near as accurate as using POPFile. I have used POPFile for a full 8 months on my PC, and it got up to 99% accurate, and to the point to where there were NO false positives.

SpamSieve is an option, but it does not work with Mail (It works with IMAP but not POP). You also have to use AppleScripts to identify what is SPAM and what is real mail. I used this app back when I used Entourage X. I did not like this AppleScript solution. Not one bit.

SpamSlam is also a pretty good app to kill SPAM. I tried SpamSlam, it is not that bad, but the setup of this app is a lot.

Both of these solutions are good. They both employ bayesian filtering. They both have nice clean instillations. They are both not worth it. Not in comparison to POPFile. No disrespect to SpamSieve or SpamSlam here. Did I mention POPFile is free, and open source (and is in very active development). Oh, you are still cringing at the command line stuff?

Stop your whining and get your hands a little dirty in the Terminal. Stopping SPAM is worth it.

This is the first part in a multipart series on POPFile and Mac OS X. Next I will discuss installing POPFile and setup of Mail and Entourage X to work with it. If you can't wait, follow these instructions for a very clear step by step how-to.

Originally posted on Breaking Windows.

Ken Edwards is the Gaming Editor at Blogcritics, and calls Breaking Windows home. Ken works part time for Student Publications at BGSU as the Webmaster and System Administrator. He is also a freelance web developer.

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POPFile Installed on OS X
Published: October 30, 2003
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Section: Sci/Tech
Filed Under: Sci/Tech: Software
Writer: Ken Edwards
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#1 — October 30, 2003 @ 09:40AM — Phillip Winn [URL]

Actually, I believe that Mail.app does include Bayesian filtering, just not a very good implementation of it. Something about not including certain headers, or something like that.

#2 — October 30, 2003 @ 12:00PM — Ken Edwards [URL]

Mail does not include Bayesian filtering. I checked on this when the new Junk Mail filter was intro'd in 10.2. The Panther improvement to the junk mail filter is that it now supports ISP junk mail headers. it also has a preference section to it self, but thats not really anything new on the classification of junk mail.

do a google for "adaptive latent semantic analysis" that is what Apple uses for Mail.

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