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User Guide - Kaspersky Lab

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SPAM Protection 179<br />

The chief application of the lists of key phrases, and in particular the white list, is<br />

that you can coordinate with trusted addressees, (for example, with colleagues),<br />

signatures containing a particular phrase. You could use, for example, a PGP<br />

signature as an email signature. You can use wildcards in the signatures and in<br />

the addresses: * and ?. A * represents any sequence of characters of any length.<br />

A question mark represents any one character.<br />

If there are asterisks and questions marks in the signature, to prevent errors with<br />

Anti-Spam processes them, they should be preceded by a backslash. Then two<br />

characters are used instead of one: \* and \?.<br />

13.3.4.1. White lists for addresses and strings<br />

The white list contains key phrases from emails that you marked as accepted,<br />

and addresses of trusted senders who would not send spam. The white list is<br />

filled manually, and the list of senders’ addresses is done automatically while<br />

training the Anti-Spam component. You can edit this list.<br />

To configure the white list:<br />

1. Open the settings window and select Anti-Spam under Protection.<br />

2. Click on Customize under Sensitivity and open the White List tab (cf.<br />

Figure 63).<br />

The tab is divided into two sections: the upper portion contains the addresses of<br />

senders of good email, and the lower contains key phrases from such emails.<br />

To enable phrase and address white lists during spam filtration, check the<br />

corresponding boxes in the Allowed senders and Allowed phrases sections.<br />

You can edit the lists using the buttons in each section.

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