The Apple Mail - Remote Training script is now able to find training mailboxes that are nested in other folders Worked around a problem where an internal Apple Mail error could prevent messages from moving to the inbox when you trained them as good The Train as Good command in Apple Mail now moves messages out of spam/junk mailboxes that have a leading space in the name for sorting When you train a message as good, and SpamSieve is moving the message back to the inbox, it’s better at handling localized inbox names Added AppleMailTrainGoodMoveAlways to the esoteric preferences, which can work around a problem with Gmail where Mail does not report the trained message as being in the right mailbox, so SpamSieve decides not to move it. Updated the crash reporter for macOS 12 Monterey SpamSieve 2.9.46 should automatically update the installed version of its Apple Mail plug-in, however if you don’t see the SpamSieve commands in Apple Mail’s Message menu, be sure to choose Install Apple Mail Plug-In from the SpamSieve menu and to enable the plug-in. (An additional update was required due to late changes in Monterey Developer Beta 9.) We recommend updating SpamSieve before updating to Monterey. Added support for Apple Mail on the forthcoming macOS 12.0. Keeping Spam Messages Out of Gmail’s Archive SpamSieve now declares notch compatibility for the new MacBook Pros Improved the diagnostic report on macOS 12 Improved the error handling when Apple Mail reports an error determining whether a message trained as spam is already in the Junk mailbox Updated the Open Window script to work around an issue on macOS 12 where some windows didn’t open due to an AppleScript error If you continue to see either of these problems, choose Install Apple Mail Plug-In from the SpamSieve menu. Worked around a bug in Apple Mail that could prevent messages trained as good from moving back to the inbox or messages (particularly POP ones) trained as spam from moving to the Junk mailbox. However, if you don’t see the SpamSieve commands in Apple Mail’s Message menu, be sure to choose Install Apple Mail Plug-In from the SpamSieve menu and to enable the plug-in. SpamSieve 2.9.47 should automatically update the installed version of its Apple Mail plug-in, and the plug-in should stay enabled. We recommend updating SpamSieve before updating macOS. Added support for Apple Mail on the forthcoming macOS 12.1. Change log not available for this version Why do good messages keep going to the Junk or Spam mailbox? Separate Spam Mailboxes for Each Account Improved the following sections of the manual: Fixed a bug where certain Unicode character sequences in a message’s address list could cause SpamSieve to hang when matching against a rule list Worked around a macOS bug that could prevent a rules file written on macOS 12 on an M1 Mac from being properly read on macOS 10.15 It also now helps you figure out if Outlook Filter Mailboxes doesn’t have Automation access to control SpamSieve. Updated the Outlook Filter Mailboxes helper app to work around a problem where macOS 12.3 would report an error at launch. SpamSieve 2.9.49 should automatically update the installed version of its Apple Mail plug-in, and the plug-in should stay enabled. Added support for Apple Mail on the forthcoming macOS 12.5 and macOS 13 Ventura. Reduced the size of the app by removing a helper tool that was only necessary for Apple Mail on macOS 10.7, which is no longer supported SpamSieve is better at handling damaged rules files Fixed a bug that in rare cases could prevent SpamSieve from detecting that two copies of the Apple Mail plug-in were loaded at the same time Fixed a bug where SpamSieve could incorrectly report that another copy of the Apple Mail plug-in was installed in the wrong place, when that copy might be necessary for another macOS user account on a different volume Made a change to prevent potential problems setting up the Message menu in Apple Mail on future versions of macOS 13 Ventura Fixed an issue where, on macOS 12.5, sometimes SpamSieve would disable its Apple Mail rules because it looked like Mail hadn’t loaded the plug-in, but actually Mail was just slow to launch Fixed an issue where, on macOS 12.5, sometimes Mail would move e-mails received immediately after launch to the Junk mailbox without asking SpamSieve whether they were spam Made various changes to improve SpamSieve’s filtering accuracy
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