On Sat, 2006-05-13 at 15:52 -0400, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
On Sat, 2006-05-13 at 15:17 +0200, Erik Slagter wrote:On Fri, 2006-05-12 at 08:00 -0400, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:I agree, and this has been mentioned several times in the past. The big problem as I see it is that there is no *standard* way of telling a mail server what is junk and what isn't. Remember that many mail hubs don't allow the user to log in. For any given setup there's certainly a way to hack the funcionality and the Junk/Not Junk buttons give you some leverage, but basically it's up to you to program them.BTW a user configurable junk/not junk button would be the solution (one option being to run a user defined script).You can already do that (by messing with XML files and/or modifying the meaning of spamd/spamc on your machine). The problem is that every user has to do it for himself because so much depends on your exact setup.
But that's not evolution's problem ;-) The problem is that the desired functionality indeed is different for every setup. The built-in functionality doesn't do it anyway (also with a custom "spamc" script) because evolution does more than I want (for instance, move it to the virtual junk folder).
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