Author Topic: lMail spam filter  (Read 1443 times)

Offline weldiger

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lMail spam filter
« on: January 29, 2019, 09:09:51 AM »
Forgive me for (there are no dumb questions) asking a dumb question.  When the spam filter has something in it I am pretty sure that Mail has it right.  Is it possible to stop that file from sending more? In the iPhone you can block a caller _ can the emailer be blocked, or if I open to unsubscribe, will it bite me. I have Anti virus apps  will they take care of virus without opening mail?
 :thanx:
Shalom
weldiger

Offline Xairbusdriver

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Re: lMail spam filter
« Reply #1 on: January 29, 2019, 10:00:53 AM »
Not sure what "lMail" is, perhaps a tie_po?! :blush-anim-cl:

My advice is to never respond to any SPAM, even to "unsubscribe". I assume you have some rules in Mail telling it to mark emails with certain criteria as "SPAM". Or perhaps you are using SpamSieve? At any rate, both Mail and SS have settings letting you tell them what to do with SPAM. I generally tell them to dump it in either "Trash" or another mailbox like "SPAM". That way, you never see it in your Inbox. I then "empty" the trash occasionally after verifying there are no 'false positives'. :thumbup:

Any response you make to a SPAMmer marks your email address as not only active but that you will actually read their garbage. What proof do you have that convinces you that they would really "un-subscribe" you from their lists?! By responding, you actually make your addy more valuable and will surely add yours to their lists they usually offer for sale to other SPAMmers. Most of the actual SPAM senders don't really have web sites that consider the wishes of their "customers" anyway. The "un-subscribe" link probably goes to a domain that the SPAMmers highjacked to look authentic and that hacked company will have no idea who you are. Besides, they didn't send the email anyway. :dntknw:

If you are using SpamSieve, absolutely, positively always use the Message->SpamSieve - Train as Spam menu to tell it you want it to treat an email as SPAM. The key word there is "Train", SS can get better if you keep training it. :yes:

Quote
will [Anti virus apps] take care of virus without opening mail?
AV apps running on your computer look through your email files on your drives to spot virus. So you still have to open Mail and let it download any messages on the servers. Some ISPs will do that searching while the emails are still on their servers, before you ever see them.

Fortunately, I can't remember ever getting any notice that there have ever been any emails containing malware that would run on a Mac. What I sometimes see is that ClamXAV has found a file on my drive that it thinks is possibly dangerous or that has characteristics of malware matching things in its database. BTW, most of those come from Adobe products... :rolleyes:

Actually, there are dumb questions, just search here for numerous examples from me!  :doh: But the more you visit and post, the sooner you earn points to erase them!! :yahoo: Which reminds me, how is your post hole business doing? It's been several years since I needed any but I tend to buy them locally to save shipping costs.
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Offline Paddy

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Re: lMail spam filter
« Reply #2 on: January 29, 2019, 04:06:44 PM »
BTW - even if Mail has sorted something out into the spam folder, if it IS something you legitimately subscribed to, you almost always can unsubscribe to it. Legitimate companies generally do abide by the law. ;) And many of them use mailing lists such as those provided by Constant Contact and MailChimp, which automatically unsubscribe you if you hit that "unsubscribe" button. Spammers, on the other hand, use that "unsubscribe" as a way to verify that your address is a working one - and you then end up on the "known good" lists these guys sell to each other. So - as Jim says, never, ever, respond to a spammer.

And no, there is no way to automagically get off anyone's spam list. The only real way to do that is change your email address - which is a bit drastic, but very effective. And then never, ever use the new email address anywhere but with friends, relatives and fully trusted businesses. I generally tell people to use more than one email address: 1 for trusted contacts, 1 for semi-trusted, and 1 for things you really aren't sure about (that one you can even not bother checking very often - I have a couple of those, and I just check them once in a blue moon via webmail - they're not cluttering up my inbox in Mail). Gmail is great for this. If something becomes polluted, just dump it and get another one. Of course getting an email address that you like and is actually usable is becoming ever more difficult. ;)
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Offline weldiger

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Re: lMail spam filter
« Reply #3 on: January 30, 2019, 09:12:08 AM »
Thank you XABD and Paddy! :thanx:  I needed that. It has been so long since I have had any brain function, that I couldn't remember that my email app was named Mail- I knew that it was not anyone else besides Apple so I used iMail to be sure I made myself clear. (nice try weldiger)
 :confused: 
XABD I had to quit the post hole business. It was failing  - Who said failure is success in progress?  I was making so much progress ---
Oh well, at least I know how Steve Wozniak feels.
Shalom
weldiger