Den här webbplatsen har begränsad funktionalitet medan vi utför underhåll för att förbättra din upplevelse. Om en artikel inte löser ditt problem och du vill ställa en fråga har vi vår gemenskap som väntar på att hjälpa dig på @FirefoxSupport på Twitter, /r/firefox på Reddit.

Sök i support

Akta dig för supportbedrägerier: Vi kommer aldrig att be dig att ringa eller skicka ett sms till ett telefonnummer eller dela personlig information. Rapportera misstänkt aktivitet med alternativet "Rapportera missbruk".

Läs mer

Messages in junk

  • 2 svar
  • 4 har detta problem
  • 16 visningar
  • Senaste svar av greg114

more options

I have had messages go into the bulk mail file when I mark these as not junk they are automatically moved to my in box, but when the same person sends me a new email it goes into my bulk mail file. How do I stop this happening as these emails are important or alternatively how can I tell Thunderbird to use my email providers junk filters.

I have had messages go into the bulk mail file when I mark these as not junk they are automatically moved to my in box, but when the same person sends me a new email it goes into my bulk mail file. How do I stop this happening as these emails are important or alternatively how can I tell Thunderbird to use my email providers junk filters.

Vald lösning

Bulk Mail is the term used by Yahoo/AOL etc., and the filtering is done at the mail server before mail is downloaded to TB. Open the account in webmail and whitelist or unblock the sender, and add them to webmail contacts.

Läs svaret i sitt sammanhang 👍 1

Alla svar (2)

more options

Vald lösning

Bulk Mail is the term used by Yahoo/AOL etc., and the filtering is done at the mail server before mail is downloaded to TB. Open the account in webmail and whitelist or unblock the sender, and add them to webmail contacts.

more options

Thanks for the suggestion. It worked perfectly! After 44 days of the same email going into spam, it arrived in my inbox this morning after I whitelisted it on my email server. I was beginning to think Thunderbird's "learning" capability was on par with that of an adolescent.