SpamPal sits between your email program and your mailbox, checking your email as you retrieve it. Any email messages that it considers to be spam will be "tagged" with a special header; you simply configure your email client to filter anything with this header into a separate folder and your spam won"t be mixed up with the rest of your email anymore.
What"s New:
- The old "port type" setting ("POP3 (specific server)" and so forth) has been split into two
- Now lists all results returned by DNSBL queries in logfile
- Removed restriction on some plugin filtering functions being called concurrantly
- Service support: Low-level tweaks to improve communication between client & service
- Changes to underlying network-access code, notably the way the IMAP4 proxy waits for data to become available. Might make it slightly more efficient
- In SMTP, messages now transmitted in chunks of 64k rather than 16k