Dnia 16.08.2022 o godz. 23:24:37 Patrick O'Callaghan pisze: > > Spam filtering is under the control of the receiver. It's trivial to > tell Gmail that a message is not spam, and it will learn that for > future reference.
It does not. Myself I have two test accounts on Gmail, I send myself mail from time to time to these accounts, mark it as non-spam, yet next messages are again going to spam. > You might also look at *why* your mail is being > classified as spam. Could it be that some people have marked it as > such? All this has been already tried and discussed countless times. I have written a lot about this on "mailop" mailing list. It is going on for more that two years now. I don't want to start this discussion again here, as it is just pointless. Believe me, I have tried everything that was possible. I even managed to contact some guy from Google via that list, who - although not directly (if he admitted that directly, he'd probably been fired) - confirmed that it just works so and they can't do anything about it. Also when I described my problem, several other people wrote that they're experiencing exactly the same. It's a domain reputation thing. The main issue is they don't take into account that "eu.org" is a public domain like ".com" or ".net" and anybody can register their domain under *.eu.org. They just consider the whole "eu.org" to be one domain, so if there are any spams from any *.eu.org domain, it counts towards the whole "eu.org" domain. This is nonsense as this is exactly the same as if a few spamming *.com domains damaged the reputation of any other *.com domain - but it's just how Google works and they don't plan to change it. The only thing that works for me is sending from another domain. And I do it sometimes if I want to be sure my mail gets delivered to Google. But this is actually like admitting defeat in fight with this moloch that Google is. My original mail address has become unusable with regard to sending to Google - I have to use another one. > The number of false positives I've had is so small that I actually > never bother to check my spam folder any more as there's no point. And that's the problem for people like me who get "punished" for don't-know-what by Google - people like you, who believe that "Google just can't be wrong", so there's no sense in checking the spam folder. Yes, it *can* be wrong, yes, it *is* wrong so many times that the number *is* significant for some senders. Or for some recipients, as my other example with the organization's account shows. How do you explain that mail from random Google accounts, send first time to our organization's account (also at Gmail), land with ca. 50% probability in spam? Here at least actually I'm in control and I can just regularly check the spam folder for messages that shouldn't be there (and I do). With sending, I have no option other than use a different email address. -- Regards, Jaroslaw Rafa r...@rafa.eu.org -- "In a million years, when kids go to school, they're gonna know: once there was a Hushpuppy, and she lived with her daddy in the Bathtub." _______________________________________________ evolution-list mailing list evolution-list@gnome.org To change your list options or unsubscribe, visit ... https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/evolution-list