04-18-2020 07:50 PM
I am looking to understand why messages to friends with @Rogers email accounts either don't get my email or find it in trash. I have my own personal domain I send emails and I tested sending an email to myself on @Rogers. The email was dropped into SPAM. There are 2 problems with this:
Not sure of anyone here that can comment on SPAM rules that are being violated so I can try and make changes from my personal domain side.
Thanks
Solved! Solved! Go to Solution.
04-18-2020 11:38 PM
Rogers/Yahoo uses algorithms to weed out spam. This is a two-fold process. If the algorithm is certain that an incoming message is spam, you won't even see it. If it's likely that it's spam, then it'll get directed to your spam folder.
I check my spam folder once a week using webmail and the algorithms must be working really well because all I get in my spam folder is spam and there's very little of that - one or two per month. No spam e-mails get through to my Outlook e-mail client and no real e-mails "go missing" from what I can tell in my correspondence with others.
If an e-mail address has been hacked, then the e-mail from that hacked account will often end up in the receiver's spam folder. Often people don't even realize that they've been hacked and that their e-mail address is being utilized to send spam. About the only way to know is if someone alerts you to this fact.
04-18-2020 11:38 PM
Rogers/Yahoo uses algorithms to weed out spam. This is a two-fold process. If the algorithm is certain that an incoming message is spam, you won't even see it. If it's likely that it's spam, then it'll get directed to your spam folder.
I check my spam folder once a week using webmail and the algorithms must be working really well because all I get in my spam folder is spam and there's very little of that - one or two per month. No spam e-mails get through to my Outlook e-mail client and no real e-mails "go missing" from what I can tell in my correspondence with others.
If an e-mail address has been hacked, then the e-mail from that hacked account will often end up in the receiver's spam folder. Often people don't even realize that they've been hacked and that their e-mail address is being utilized to send spam. About the only way to know is if someone alerts you to this fact.
04-19-2020 10:03 AM