I've seen FBL reports from several Comcast users who insisted they never reported the message. In at least one case, we eventually figured out that the user had an old, forgotten autofilter that routed the email to spam and automatically sent me an FBL report every time a message matched the filter. He removed the autofilter and the reports stopped.
On Tue, Nov 7, 2017 at 7:59 AM, John Levine <[email protected]> wrote: > In article <[email protected]> you write: > >I'm wondering if there are any other actions that trigger a spam report > and > >consequently a FBL report. IP reputation, message content, 3rd party > >antivirus actions, etc. ? > > I would be pretty surprised if the reason were anything other than the > recipient hitting the spam button. People have very hard to > articulate ideas about what sort of mail they want. > > I run a mailing list about eastern european folk dancing and get a > spam report about once a month for ordinary list mail. It's just > that list, none of the others. > > R's, > John > > _______________________________________________ > mailop mailing list > [email protected] > https://chilli.nosignal.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mailop > ===============================================
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