搜索 | 用户支持

防范以用户支持为名的诈骗。我们绝对不会要求您拨打电话或发送短信,及提供任何个人信息。请使用“举报滥用”选项报告涉及违规的行为。

详细了解

How can I block messages with encoded subjects

  • 4 个回答
  • 2 人有此问题
  • 19 次查看
  • 最后回复者为 RealMaguff

more options

A lot of the SPAM I get bypasses my normal rules by encoding the subject in UTF-8 - for example, the Subject "Military Grade Pen" is listed this way in the message source: Subject: =?utf-8?B?TWls0ZZ0YXJ5IEdyYWRlIFBlbiBOb3cgQXZh0ZZsYWJsZSB0byBQdWJs0ZZjIA==?=

And because of this, trying to block "Military Grade" or "?utf-8" in the Subject fails.

Is there any way to block all messages with an encoded Subject header?

A lot of the SPAM I get bypasses my normal rules by encoding the subject in UTF-8 - for example, the Subject "Military Grade Pen" is listed this way in the message source: Subject: =?utf-8?B?TWls0ZZ0YXJ5IEdyYWRlIFBlbiBOb3cgQXZh0ZZsYWJsZSB0byBQdWJs0ZZjIA==?= And because of this, trying to block "Military Grade" or "?utf-8" in the Subject fails. Is there any way to block all messages with an encoded Subject header?

被采纳的解决方案

I get legitimate email using utf-8 in the subject line, so for some of us your simplistic "utf-8 == bad" association just doesn't work.

There are two add-ons, FiltaQuilla or Expression Search that I think will add regular expression tools to your filters, and these can be used to parse the subject line to detect non-ansii characters. I don't have a worked example here, but I have set up a filter just to tag incoming messages in order to assess how common the use of utf-8 in subjects is. My conclusion is that utf-8 is here to stay and I fully expect its use to become more widespread. I've also tried to reassure users that images appearing in the subject line are not carefully crafted malware, but just selected utf-8/unicode characters.

I'd also add in support of the previous comment that IMHO you are wasting your time trying to create filters for this.

定位到答案原位置 👍 0

所有回复 (4)

more options

Fighting spam with static filters is a battle you can't win. It is therefore recommended to use the Thunderbird built-in junk mail controls. Alternatively make use of your email providers spam filter. http://kb.mozillazine.org/Junk_Mail_Controls

more options

Thunderbird's built-in junk controls are useless in this scenario, and I have SPAM filtering with my provider that catches most of it. The messages I'm trying to block are coming from a different domain/IP address every time (botnet I assume). This junk all has encoded Subjects to get past keyword filters, but all of the other mail I receive regularly has a plain-text Subject header - so my question still stands.

more options

选择的解决方案

I get legitimate email using utf-8 in the subject line, so for some of us your simplistic "utf-8 == bad" association just doesn't work.

There are two add-ons, FiltaQuilla or Expression Search that I think will add regular expression tools to your filters, and these can be used to parse the subject line to detect non-ansii characters. I don't have a worked example here, but I have set up a filter just to tag incoming messages in order to assess how common the use of utf-8 in subjects is. My conclusion is that utf-8 is here to stay and I fully expect its use to become more widespread. I've also tried to reassure users that images appearing in the subject line are not carefully crafted malware, but just selected utf-8/unicode characters.

I'd also add in support of the previous comment that IMHO you are wasting your time trying to create filters for this.

more options

Zenos thanks - a Regular Expression filter should work for what I need. I know that trying to filter keywords seems futile, but this is a very specific scenario I'm working on where I get the same 5 or 6 subjects practically daily. Being able to filter with RegEx will help.