SpamPal sits between your email program and your pop3/imap4 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.
Changes:
- When SpamPal crashes, users now have the option to automatically send a report to the developer
- Local blacklistings were being overridden by positive DNSBL query results - fixed
- SpamPalLSP.dll no longer calls OpenThread() - this function is not supported on Win9x and was preventing transparent proxy from loading on this OS!
- Rewritten overlapped-operation-handling code - should be more robust now
- Rare set of circumstances could result in SpamPal reading more data than it should and corrupting input stream; fixed
- SpamPal was reporting it supported certain IMAP4 extensions when it doesn't - fixed
View: Product Overview