TBH - hadn't taken a closer look at pyzor in quite a while - and don't know how well it performs in qualifying spam - would you have any experiences?@Stoiko Ivanov may be you can explain, why PMG doesn’t use Pyzor by default as well. DCC I read was about license issues (if shipped with software, you need to pay fees, however could be an option in your subscriptions or you could provide an easy install script which need to be invoked manually), but I don’t see any reasons for Pyzor and Pyzor has also good scores and influence on PMG spam detection quality.
OTOH - as for the licensing and pricing - the client and server software should be fine - however as far as I understand it pyzor only works sensibly for most installs with a publicly hosted server - and the one referenced in their docs and in my google-search (public.pyzor.org:24441):
a) currently is not reachable (at least from 2 places I just tested it):
Code:
nc -v public.pyzor.org 24441
nc: connect to public.pyzor.org port 24441 (tcp) failed: Connection refused
nc: connect to public.pyzor.org port 24441 (tcp) failed: Connection refused
Spamexperts who have originally developed it (my guess based on the github url [0], and that they run 'public.pyzor.org' (see [1]), seem to have merged with solarwinds and on the homepage I could not find anything related to an AUP for public.pyzor.org - however - this is just after searching for 10 minutes - so if you have any pointers to the conditions of using public.pyzor.org (or have great experiences by running your own pyzor server) - please share them!
I hope this explains it!
[0] https://github.com/SpamExperts/pyzor
[1] https://pyzor.readthedocs.io/en/release-1-0-0/introduction.html