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SpamBayes junk email filtering
software training will be held Tuesday, September
14 and Thursday, October 7 for faculty and staff.
--Lori Mardis, Librarian/Instructor
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Over
half of email in your Inbox is typically junk email, most
of it nuisance mail rather than malicious. However, malicious
Spam, such as financial scams, are on the rise. The most
well-known of these, the Nigerian scam has continued to
circulate on the Northwest campus, along with the Citibank
scam asking you to update your account information. The
latter scam prompted Campus Safety to send a mass mailing
to students, faculty and staff warning them of this fraudulent
email.
Because
of the ever-increasing influx of Spam inundating campus
inboxes, Information Systems has taken steps to help faculty
and staff better cope with junk email by acquiring email
filtering software for Microsoft Outlook. SpamBayes training
will be held from 4 to 5 p.m. on Tuesay, September 14, 2004, and from 3:30 to 5 p.m. on Thursday, October 7, 2004, on the second floor of Owens Library in room 250.
SpamBayes
sorts email so that users do not have to do it manually,
directing Spam email into one of two folders: one for known
Spam and one for suspsected Spam. However, the program works
only when Microsoft Outlook is open and running.
To sign up to participate
in the junk email filter software training session contact
Information Systems-Client Computing Manager, Merlin Miller,
at merlin@nwmissouri.edu.
Participants should bring
their notebook computer to the training session. Those attending
without notebook computers will be able to observe, but
not participate, in the hands-on portion of the training
session.
According to Miller,
users can take the following steps to help fight Spam:
If you have questions
about the SpamBayes junk email filtering training session,
please contact the Client Computing-Information Systems
Help Desk at 660.562.1634.