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For the past week or so, Gmail has gotten *very* aggressive about dumping email from Yahoo users that are going through certain mailing lists into the Spam bucket. I assume that there is some technical reason for this (most likely, they've gotten more rigid about some email-authentication protocol that isn't working well when passing through the mailing lists), but it's getting bloody damned annoying: it's up to half a dozen false positives a day, and no real Spam that I've seen. Indeed, they're not even claiming that it *is* Spam -- they're just dumping it into the Spam folder with a message saying "we can't authenticate this".
Does anybody know of a way that those of us who can tell the difference between a phishing scam and a real email can tell them, "Yes, I know, whatever, just freaking knock it off"?
Does anybody know of a way that those of us who can tell the difference between a phishing scam and a real email can tell them, "Yes, I know, whatever, just freaking knock it off"?
(no subject)
Date: 2014-04-13 06:03 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2014-04-13 06:38 pm (UTC)Oddly enough, however, my GMail isn't throwing the false positives. Not sure exactly why, but I do have two things I do that might help others:
1) Set up explicit filters for the mailing lists, and
2) Ensure you're marking any false positives in Spam as "Not Spam". This kicks them back into Inbox w/o filtering (itself annoying), but also hints to GMail to "knock it off".
(no subject)
Date: 2014-04-13 07:30 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2014-04-13 07:57 pm (UTC)Thanks for the pointer...
(no subject)
Date: 2014-04-13 07:46 pm (UTC)Perhaps the current crop of yahoo engineers think mailing lists are irrelevant in this age of Facebook and twitter.
(no subject)
Date: 2014-04-13 11:24 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2014-04-14 11:52 am (UTC)