User manual
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AVG 8.5 Internet Security © 2008 Copyright AVG Technologies CZ, s.r.o. All rights reserved.
Value 60-79 - Considered as a quite aggressive configuration. E-mail
messages that are possibly spam will be filtered out. Non-spam messages are
likely to be caught as well.
Value 1-59 - Very aggressive configuration. Non-spam e-mail messages are as
likely to be caught as real spam messages. This threshold range is not
recommended for normal use.
Value 0 - In this mode, you will only receive e-mail messages from senders in
your Whitelist. Any other e-mail messages will be considered as spam. This
threshold range is not recommended for normal use.
In the Engine performance settings dialog you can further define how the detected
spam e-mail messages should be treated:
Move message to junk folder - mark this check box to specify that each
detected spam message should be automatically moved to the specific junk
folder within your e-mail client;
Add recipients of sent e-mails to whitelist - tick this check box to confirm that all
recipients of sent e-mails can be trusted, and all e-mail messages coming from their
e-mail accounts can be delivered;
Modify subject for messages marked as spam - tick this check box if you
would like all messages detected as spam to be marked with a specific word or
character in the e-mail subject field; the desired text can be typed in the
activated text field.
Control buttons
Train Anti-Spam button open the Anti-Spam training wizard described in details in
the next chapter.
The first dialog of the Anti-Spam Training Wizard asks you to select the source of
e-mail messages you want to use for training. Usually, you will want to use either
e-mails that have been incorrectly marked as SPAM, or spam messages that have not
been recognized.