On 30 November 2014 at 20:33, Graham Harris harris...@gmail.com wrote:
I setup a filter in gmail to send all IBM-MAIN stuff to its own folder (or
label?), and my experience is that nothing (IBM-MAIN-wise) then gets sent
to spam - the filter overrides it.
Unfortunately it doesn't override the
Gmail could, in the sense that it is within Google's technical
capacity, deal with this problem. It has instead elected to discover
that characteristic, long-standing LISTSERV behavior is a species of
'phishing'.
This position has no technical merit. It is, I suppose, convenient;
but it opens
It's at the bottom of every IBM-Main post.
Just send unsub ibm-main to listserv and that's it.
In a message dated 11/30/2014 12:23:22 A.M. Central Standard Time,
linda.lst...@comcast.net writes:
Many lists do not contain unsubscribe directions and links. That would
take up a great deal
I setup a filter in gmail to send all IBM-MAIN stuff to its own folder (or
label?), and my experience is that nothing (IBM-MAIN-wise) then gets sent
to spam - the filter overrides it.
On 30 November 2014 at 08:07, Ed Finnell
000248cce9f3-dmarc-requ...@listserv.ua.edu wrote:
It's at the
Gmail tells me it is marking as spam because other people are marking it as
spam.
So if you know anyone who marks it as spam instead of sending an
unsubscribe request, perhaps you would let them know there's a better way?
:-)
On Nov 29, 2014 4:49 PM, Donald Likens dlik...@infosecinc.com wrote:
Hi Rupert,
IMHO Google is too aggressive with marking thins SPAM. I seems that they mark
anything from a listsev as SPAM and expect the user to tell them it is not. Not
all email hosts do that, but some do.
Many lists do not contain unsubscribe directions and links. That would take up
a