razor 1:2.85-4.1build1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

razor (1:2.85-4.1build1) utopic; urgency=medium

  * Rebuild for Perl 5.20.0.
 -- Colin Watson <email address hidden>   Thu, 21 Aug 2014 13:49:05 +0100

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Uploaded by:
Colin Watson
Uploaded to:
Utopic
Original maintainer:
Giuseppe Iuculano
Architectures:
any
Section:
mail
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

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Series Pocket Published Component Section

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File Size SHA-256 Checksum
razor_2.85.orig.tar.gz 90.3 KiB 094b54713f1e6d2a39aaf4e02633ade7024fc36e9a5a069872cc95c7bf950f58
razor_2.85-4.1build1.diff.gz 14.5 KiB 415ee679702a67489a74d0f8a86c7290a45a32b2bffd3c018b494166bd79f6d1
razor_2.85-4.1build1.dsc 1.9 KiB 90cf81f515084d7270c7cac7240ae2ee87031f409fa61925414e0e9e26df07aa

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Binary packages built by this source

razor: spam-catcher using a collaborative filtering network

 Vipul's Razor is a distributed, collaborative, spam detection and
 filtering network. Razor establishes a distributed and constantly updating
 catalogue of spam in propagation. This catalogue is used by clients to
 filter out known spam. On receiving a spam, a Razor Reporting Agent (run
 by an end-user or a troll box) calculates and submits a 20-character unique
 identification of the spam (a SHA Digest) to its closest Razor
 Catalogue Server. The Catalogue Server echos this signature to other
 trusted servers after storing it in its database. Prior to manual
 processing or transport-level reception, Razor Filtering Agents (end-users
 and MTAs) check their incoming mail against a Catalogue Server and filter
 out or deny transport in case of a signature match. Catalogued spam, once
 identified and reported by a Reporting Agent, can be blocked out by the
 rest of the Filtering Agents on the network.

razor-dbgsym: debug symbols for package razor

 Vipul's Razor is a distributed, collaborative, spam detection and
 filtering network. Razor establishes a distributed and constantly updating
 catalogue of spam in propagation. This catalogue is used by clients to
 filter out known spam. On receiving a spam, a Razor Reporting Agent (run
 by an end-user or a troll box) calculates and submits a 20-character unique
 identification of the spam (a SHA Digest) to its closest Razor
 Catalogue Server. The Catalogue Server echos this signature to other
 trusted servers after storing it in its database. Prior to manual
 processing or transport-level reception, Razor Filtering Agents (end-users
 and MTAs) check their incoming mail against a Catalogue Server and filter
 out or deny transport in case of a signature match. Catalogued spam, once
 identified and reported by a Reporting Agent, can be blocked out by the
 rest of the Filtering Agents on the network.