On 4/19/10 8:33 AM, Richard Brown wrote:

On Sun, Apr 18, 2010 at 4:35 PM, Stuart A. Yeates <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    On Mon, Apr 19, 2010 at 8:38 AM, steve uurtamo <[email protected]
    <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
     > i have to pull about 1/5 of this list's emails
     > out of gmail's spam filter [...].

    A solution to this is to create a filter for the list ('filter
    messages like this' on the drop down by the reply buttom) and tell
    gmail never to put emails that match the filter in the spam folder.

    [Yes, I'm aware that this is merely treating the symptoms]

    cheers
    stuart


I'd like to second Stuart's approach, at least for gmail use; gmail
users will find the following of interest.

I have not had to drag any computer-go messages out of my spam box ever
since I:

    * Created a /label, /"[computer-go]", by going to Settings -->
      Labels --> Create new label.
    * Created a /filter, /by going to Settings --> Filters --> Create a
      new filter.

I disagree that doing so is merely treating the symptoms of a problem.
What it is,
is sorting incoming mail, and putting it into folders, /before /the spam
box ever sees it,
which the spam box never does.  The "label" really acts like a folder.

This obviates the need for a spam-filter ever to be applied to these
messages at all, and so it isn't applied.

Now, I know that gmail will try to tell you "Search, don't sort!"  They
look upon folders
as somehow old-fashioned. <Ptui!>  Gol'-danged whippersnappers.  I likes
to put me
mail inna folder, by Jiminy.  So, I /sort, /which obviates the need for
/searching!/

Google-hooligans!

I had a similar problem with the AGA go e-journal, took the same
approach, and now
those never end up in my spam box either.  They end up instead, neatly
sorted into
my AGA folder.

Same goes for other stuff I knew I wanted.  Here is my list of labels
and filters:

*The following filters are applied to all incoming mail:

*
Matches: from:([email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>)
Do this: Skip Inbox, Apply label "AGA"

        
Matches: subject:([computer-go])
Do this: Skip Inbox, Apply label "[computer-go]"

        
Matches: from:([email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>)
Do this: Skip Inbox, Apply label "Negreanu"

        
Matches: from:([email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>)
Do this: Skip Inbox, Apply label "slashdot"

        
Matches: label:buzz
Do this: Skip Inbox     

Since there's already a "buzz" folder (inconveniently placed immediately
below my inbox, yuck)
none of that detritus shows up in my inbox either.

And, by the miracle of old-fashioned technology (Yankee ingenuity, we
used to call it)
there are fewer "false positives", so almost every message that ends up
in my spam box,
really is spam!

And if it's not spam, I can just create a new filter.

Now I have protected myself from the disgruntled folks who are marking
the list messages as spam.

So, for me, this is a solution, not just a workaround.

--
Rich



Just fyi, my experience with this is that adding computer-go (and wvgc-go) to my pass through list doesn't work, I also have to add computer-go-bounces and wvgc-go-bounces to the list. Articles are quarantined with the -bounces part even though when I forward them they show up without it. I am not aware of having missed any articles for either group since adding the two -bounces addresses. I use a Mac and Thunderbird and have wondered if my experience is peculiar to my system or my ISP.

Michael
_______________________________________________
Computer-go mailing list
[email protected]
http://dvandva.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/computer-go

Reply via email to