Join the AMA (Ask Me Anything) with the Firefox leadership team to celebrate Firefox 20th anniversary and discuss Firefox’s future on Mozilla Connect. Mark your calendar on Thursday, November 14, 18:00 - 20:00 UTC!

Dette websted vil have begrænset funktionalitet, mens vi gennemgår vedligeholdelse for at forbedre din oplevelse. Hvis en artikel ikke løser dit problem, og du vil stille et spørgsmål, har vi vores supportfællesskab, der venter på at hjælpe dig på @FirefoxSupport på Twitter og/r/firefox på Reddit.

Søg i Support

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

Læs mere

Can we have a method where any incoming mail that has an attachment is automatically detected and moved to a seperate folder off an accounts inbox.

  • 1 svar
  • 1 har dette problem
  • 1 visning
  • Seneste svar af Zenos

more options

I'd like a filtering option that would allow a message with an attachment to be moved to a different folder before landing in the inbox so that if my anti-virus decides it needs to delete the folder to remove the virus completely I'm not going to trash all my other emails.

The same could be done for emails containing links.

It would be good if these sacrificial folders were automatically regenerated ( if deleted by an antivirus client ) as Thunderbird boots.

I'd like a filtering option that would allow a message with an attachment to be moved to a different folder before landing in the inbox so that if my anti-virus decides it needs to delete the folder to remove the virus completely I'm not going to trash all my other emails. The same could be done for emails containing links. It would be good if these sacrificial folders were automatically regenerated ( if deleted by an antivirus client ) as Thunderbird boots.

Alle svar (1)

more options

The filter in Thunderbird works on what is delivered to the Inbox, so I think your plan is doomed to failure.

If you want to head it off before it gets anywhere near your computer, you need to work at the server. Does your mail provider offer any filtering?

Personally I wouldn't tolerate an anti virus that had the potential to cause so much damage.

There is a setting in Thunderbird to permit anti-virus to access your email without destroying entire folders. Look under Tools|Options.