Another interesting directory: amavisd-new-2.4.3/quarantine
That seems to clean itself up after a week, but I hadn't known that amavis would quarantine things for reasons other than spam or clamav. Here's a false positive that might be critical for some people:
Code:
Return-Path: <>
Delivered-To: bad-header-quarantine
X-Envelope-From: <bounce-11584703-5644716@lists.lexico.com>
X-Envelope-To: <********@carleton.edu>
X-Quarantine-ID: <6xRo6ArO9i9Y>
X-Amavis-Alert: BAD HEADER Duplicate header field: "To"
Received: **** (amavisd-new, port 10024)
with ESMTP id 6xRo6ArO9i9Y for <********@carleton.edu>;
Mon, 12 Nov 2007 02:07:16 -0600 (CST)
Received: from lists.lexico.com (lists.lexico.com [66.161.12.115])
with SMTP id lAC87Er4012501
for <********@carleton.edu>; Mon, 12 Nov 2007 02:07:15 -0600
X-Quarantine-ID: <Nc2mXHHk6OWS>
X-Virus-Scanned: amavisd-new at lexico.com
X-Amavis-Alert: BAD HEADER, Duplicate header field: "To"
X-Spam-Flag: NO
X-Spam-Score: -2.599
X-Spam-Level:
X-Spam-Status: No, score=-2.599 tagged_above=-100 required=5 tests=[AWL=-0.001, BAYES_00=-2.599, HTML_MESSAGE=0.001]
Date: Mon, 12 Nov 2007 00:00:00 -0800
To: Joe User <********@carleton.edu>
To: wordoftheday-es@lists.lexico.com
Subject: mano (2): Dictionary.com Spanish Word of the Day
From: "Dictionary.com Spanish Word of the Day" <doctor@dictionary.com>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary="3b47187f1c80306cbb35a53b3d7ce2cf"
Message-Id: <LYRIS-5644716-11584703-2007.11.12-00.00.28--********#carleton.edu@lists.lexico.com>
List-Unsubscribe: <mailto:leave-11584703-5644716W@lists.lexico.com>
List-Subscribe: <mailto:subscribe-wordoftheday-es@lists.lexico.com>
List-Owner: <mailto:owner-wordoftheday-es@lists.lexico.com>
X-URL: <http://www.dictionary.com/wordoftheday/list/>
Reply-To: doctor@dictionary.com
X-Message-Id: <20071112075954.0584488405D@mail.lexico.com>
Sender: bounce-11584703-5644716@lists.lexico.com