Because, if its below the termination threshold, its neither blocked as spam or 
terminated.
If its above termination threshold, the user is blocked, which means that spam 
gets blocked too.

So they basically never block without terminating. Either they block and 
terminate, or they dont.

This means of course, that they don't terminate for 1 spam email, it must come 
a specific amount so not a "spammy" word triggers termination and then it turns 
out someone is sending emails about their nice collection of a very specific 
brand of *expensive* armband timepieces between 2 private family members.

So trust me, they do block spam, but they only do it after a specific threshold.

-----Ursprungligt meddelande-----
Från: Carsten Schiefner via mailop <[email protected]> 
Skickat: den 13 december 2025 15:05
Till: [email protected]
Ämne: Re: [mailop] Google knows that its spam, they recognize it when its 
incoming, just not when theyre s

Sebastian & all -

On 13.12.2025 13:19, Sebastian Nielsen via mailop wrote:
> [...] So they, what I know of, never 
> block outgoing spam, but instead, terminate users that are detected 
> sending spam.

now I am asking myself: what's wrong with doing both, i.e. blocking 
outgoing spam *AND* terminating users that are detected to be sending spam?

Best,

        -C.
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