The spams were recognized by gmail as spam, and didn't even appear in
my Apple Mail inbox. The only way I saw them in apple mail was by
going to the gmail folder on the left sidebar. I'm thinking that's
where Growl found them. I think there is a way in the gmail webpage to
keep those folders from appearing in Apple Mail, but I've forgotten at
the moment.

Is there a way for Growl to only check the Mail inbox? If not --
feature request!


--

On Dec 28, 10:43 pm, Peter Hosey <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Dec 28, 2010, at 20:33:58, outpost wrote:
>
> > Yes, I'm pretty sure growl notified it -- but I'm not absolutely sure.
>
> Hm. Well, that shouldn't happen.
>
> About the only way you could get a notification for a spam message (that Mail 
> recognizes as spam), having turned off the New Junk Mail notification in 
> Growl, is if Mail somehow hasn't marked it as spam yet (so GrowlMail sees it 
> as a non-spam message). This is actually somewhat plausible, if the body 
> hasn't come in yet so that Mail can analyze it.
>
> I'm not sure how we can address that. Even after the message body arrives, 
> Mail can be very lazy about analyzing messages' junk mail status.

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