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!

Este site está com funcionalidades limitadas enquanto realizamos manutenção para melhorar sua experiência de uso. Se nenhum artigo resolver seu problema e você quiser fazer uma pergunta, nossa comunidade de suporte pode te ajudar em @FirefoxSupport no Twitter e /r/firefox no Reddit.

Pesquisar no site de suporte

Evite golpes de suporte. Nunca pedimos que você ligue ou envie uma mensagem de texto para um número de telefone, ou compartilhe informações pessoais. Denuncie atividades suspeitas usando a opção “Denunciar abuso”.

Saiba mais

Esta discussão foi arquivada. Faça uma nova pergunta se precisa de ajuda.

How to Flag Email as NOT SPAM?

  • 1 resposta
  • 2 têm este problema
  • 1 exibição
  • Última resposta de Matt

more options

There are two "bad email" files in Thunderbird: JUNK and SPAM. I'm still not clear on the difference.

For JUNK mail, TB gives us the option to select "NOT JUNK". Good.

But for SPAM, I cannot find the option "NOT SPAM"

1) Why are there separate SPAM and JUNK directories? And why are they managed differently? This seems terribly non-intuitive and inconsistent and just strange.

2) How can I train SPAM filter to not flag good email from trusted senders? For instance, I get email from my wife many times a day for many years. Today, TB put her email into SPAM. Isn't there a simple command to "white list" a sender's email address?

There are two "bad email" files in Thunderbird: JUNK and SPAM. I'm still not clear on the difference. For JUNK mail, TB gives us the option to select "NOT JUNK". Good. But for SPAM, I cannot find the option "NOT SPAM" 1) Why are there separate SPAM and JUNK directories? And why are they managed differently? This seems terribly non-intuitive and inconsistent and just strange. 2) How can I train SPAM filter to not flag good email from trusted senders? For instance, I get email from my wife many times a day for many years. Today, TB put her email into SPAM. Isn't there a simple command to "white list" a sender's email address?

Solução escolhida

The difference is a bit of a setup mess for you, but in this instance it does make clear a couple of things.

1. Junk is the messages Thunderbird thinks are SPAM and are managed by Thunderbird junk settings. 2. SPAM is the messages your mail provider thinks are SPAM and on the whole will ignore Thunderbird's settings.

Normally you should only have one folder which Thunderbird and you mail provider share for SPAM/Junk mail. The simplest thing is to go into account settings and change the folder used for junk to the SPAM folder. You will still have two folders, but the Junk one should change it's icon to a standard folder icon and can be deleted once you decide the folder has nothing useful in it.

Then we get to the truly messy part of SPAM filtering. You can't train your mail providers filter and what it does has nothing to do with Thunderbird. Thunderbird filter is a learning filter. I have not heard of a mail provider having such a thing. They work with one size fits all. Most have some form of whitelisting on their web site, like you have to add the senders to your online address book or the like. Finally the truly messy part. There are "internet security suites" or antivirus products that think they can help manage spam for you and they can add a third independent player in the spam filtering of your email address.

Ler esta resposta 👍 2

Todas as respostas (1)

more options

Solução escolhida

The difference is a bit of a setup mess for you, but in this instance it does make clear a couple of things.

1. Junk is the messages Thunderbird thinks are SPAM and are managed by Thunderbird junk settings. 2. SPAM is the messages your mail provider thinks are SPAM and on the whole will ignore Thunderbird's settings.

Normally you should only have one folder which Thunderbird and you mail provider share for SPAM/Junk mail. The simplest thing is to go into account settings and change the folder used for junk to the SPAM folder. You will still have two folders, but the Junk one should change it's icon to a standard folder icon and can be deleted once you decide the folder has nothing useful in it.

Then we get to the truly messy part of SPAM filtering. You can't train your mail providers filter and what it does has nothing to do with Thunderbird. Thunderbird filter is a learning filter. I have not heard of a mail provider having such a thing. They work with one size fits all. Most have some form of whitelisting on their web site, like you have to add the senders to your online address book or the like. Finally the truly messy part. There are "internet security suites" or antivirus products that think they can help manage spam for you and they can add a third independent player in the spam filtering of your email address.