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| Tags: email, filtering, junk, outlook, rules |
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#1
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Hello!
I have a problem with Outlook 2003 SP3 and the Junk Email folder. I have filtering set to Low, and I get emails from a contact page on a web site that always have the same subject. Sometimes, those messages end up in the Junk Email folder, sometimes they end up in the Inbox. I created a rule that says for any email with that subject, move it to the Inbox and stop processing more rules. The problem is that some of the messages STILL end up in the Junk folder. So, how can I stop the Junk Email filter from moving these messages? Is there some hidden way to make them stay in the Inbox? Can rules be scheduled to run? Thank you! Gregg Hill |
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#2
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If I'm not mistaken, rules get processed after junk mail filter kicks in.
How about adding the email address to safe sender list? "Gregg Hill" wrote in message ... Hello! I have a problem with Outlook 2003 SP3 and the Junk Email folder. I have filtering set to Low, and I get emails from a contact page on a web site that always have the same subject. Sometimes, those messages end up in the Junk Email folder, sometimes they end up in the Inbox. I created a rule that says for any email with that subject, move it to the Inbox and stop processing more rules. The problem is that some of the messages STILL end up in the Junk folder. So, how can I stop the Junk Email filter from moving these messages? Is there some hidden way to make them stay in the Inbox? Can rules be scheduled to run? Thank you! Gregg Hill |
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#3
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John,
I thought rules came after junk filtering as well, but it appears to be the other way around, because the junk filter keeps winning the fight...sometimes. Adding the sender's address would do no good, because the sender is always different. The web contact form uses the email address the person enters and makes that appear as the From address (which, technically, is forging the email, since it is not coming from that person's normal server. That went over like a lead balloon when I pointed it out to the web developer!). Gregg Hill "John" a wrote in message ... If I'm not mistaken, rules get processed after junk mail filter kicks in. How about adding the email address to safe sender list? "Gregg Hill" wrote in message ... Hello! I have a problem with Outlook 2003 SP3 and the Junk Email folder. I have filtering set to Low, and I get emails from a contact page on a web site that always have the same subject. Sometimes, those messages end up in the Junk Email folder, sometimes they end up in the Inbox. I created a rule that says for any email with that subject, move it to the Inbox and stop processing more rules. The problem is that some of the messages STILL end up in the Junk folder. So, how can I stop the Junk Email filter from moving these messages? Is there some hidden way to make them stay in the Inbox? Can rules be scheduled to run? Thank you! Gregg Hill |
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#4
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What I meant to say was junk mail filter will always "win".
from: http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/ou...429671033.aspx "Rules are now designed so that they do not act on messages that are moved to the Junk E-mail folder." If it's coming from the same IP address(es), and if there's Exchange server, perhaps you could whitelist the IP address(es) on your Exchange server. I have no other suggestions, sorry. "Gregg Hill" wrote in message ... John, I thought rules came after junk filtering as well, but it appears to be the other way around, because the junk filter keeps winning the fight...sometimes. Adding the sender's address would do no good, because the sender is always different. The web contact form uses the email address the person enters and makes that appear as the From address (which, technically, is forging the email, since it is not coming from that person's normal server. That went over like a lead balloon when I pointed it out to the web developer!). Gregg Hill "John" a wrote in message ... If I'm not mistaken, rules get processed after junk mail filter kicks in. How about adding the email address to safe sender list? "Gregg Hill" wrote in message ... Hello! I have a problem with Outlook 2003 SP3 and the Junk Email folder. I have filtering set to Low, and I get emails from a contact page on a web site that always have the same subject. Sometimes, those messages end up in the Junk Email folder, sometimes they end up in the Inbox. I created a rule that says for any email with that subject, move it to the Inbox and stop processing more rules. The problem is that some of the messages STILL end up in the Junk folder. So, how can I stop the Junk Email filter from moving these messages? Is there some hidden way to make them stay in the Inbox? Can rules be scheduled to run? Thank you! Gregg Hill |
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#5
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Are you connected to an Exchange 2003 server? I ask because it is possible
that the Intelligent Message Filter on your server is assigning the message an SCL that's causing it to be put in your Junk Folder. If that's the case, putting the web server's ip address in the Exchange server's accept list, in connection filtering, should fix the problem. I imagine there's a similar possible fix if you're on Exchange 2007. -Peter "Gregg Hill" wrote in message ... John, I thought rules came after junk filtering as well, but it appears to be the other way around, because the junk filter keeps winning the fight...sometimes. Adding the sender's address would do no good, because the sender is always different. The web contact form uses the email address the person enters and makes that appear as the From address (which, technically, is forging the email, since it is not coming from that person's normal server. That went over like a lead balloon when I pointed it out to the web developer!). Gregg Hill "John" a wrote in message ... If I'm not mistaken, rules get processed after junk mail filter kicks in. How about adding the email address to safe sender list? "Gregg Hill" wrote in message ... Hello! I have a problem with Outlook 2003 SP3 and the Junk Email folder. I have filtering set to Low, and I get emails from a contact page on a web site that always have the same subject. Sometimes, those messages end up in the Junk Email folder, sometimes they end up in the Inbox. I created a rule that says for any email with that subject, move it to the Inbox and stop processing more rules. The problem is that some of the messages STILL end up in the Junk folder. So, how can I stop the Junk Email filter from moving these messages? Is there some hidden way to make them stay in the Inbox? Can rules be scheduled to run? Thank you! Gregg Hill |
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#7
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"Rules are now designed so that they do not act on messages that are moved
to the Junk E-mail folder." I wonder what bright-eyed genius came up with that behavior. Thank you for letting me know! They have POP accounts. I intend to get this domain onto Exchange. Gregg Hill "John" a wrote in message ... What I meant to say was junk mail filter will always "win". from: http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/ou...429671033.aspx "Rules are now designed so that they do not act on messages that are moved to the Junk E-mail folder." If it's coming from the same IP address(es), and if there's Exchange server, perhaps you could whitelist the IP address(es) on your Exchange server. I have no other suggestions, sorry. "Gregg Hill" wrote in message ... John, I thought rules came after junk filtering as well, but it appears to be the other way around, because the junk filter keeps winning the fight...sometimes. Adding the sender's address would do no good, because the sender is always different. The web contact form uses the email address the person enters and makes that appear as the From address (which, technically, is forging the email, since it is not coming from that person's normal server. That went over like a lead balloon when I pointed it out to the web developer!). Gregg Hill "John" a wrote in message ... If I'm not mistaken, rules get processed after junk mail filter kicks in. How about adding the email address to safe sender list? "Gregg Hill" wrote in message ... Hello! I have a problem with Outlook 2003 SP3 and the Junk Email folder. I have filtering set to Low, and I get emails from a contact page on a web site that always have the same subject. Sometimes, those messages end up in the Junk Email folder, sometimes they end up in the Inbox. I created a rule that says for any email with that subject, move it to the Inbox and stop processing more rules. The problem is that some of the messages STILL end up in the Junk folder. So, how can I stop the Junk Email filter from moving these messages? Is there some hidden way to make them stay in the Inbox? Can rules be scheduled to run? Thank you! Gregg Hill |
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#8
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rules never applied to messages that were moved to junk email folder - they
used to act on mail before the junk email filter - now the junk filter gets the junk out first. -- Diane Poremsky [MVP - Outlook] Author, Teach Yourself Outlook 2003 in 24 Hours Need Help with Common Tasks? http://www.outlook-tips.net/beginner/ Outlook 2007: http://www.slipstick.com/outlook/ol2007/ Outlook Tips by email: Outlook Tips: http://www.outlook-tips.net/ Outlook & Exchange Solutions Center: http://www.slipstick.com Subscribe to Exchange Messaging Outlook newsletter: "Gregg Hill" wrote in message ... "Rules are now designed so that they do not act on messages that are moved to the Junk E-mail folder." I wonder what bright-eyed genius came up with that behavior. Thank you for letting me know! They have POP accounts. I intend to get this domain onto Exchange. Gregg Hill "John" a wrote in message ... What I meant to say was junk mail filter will always "win". from: http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/ou...429671033.aspx "Rules are now designed so that they do not act on messages that are moved to the Junk E-mail folder." If it's coming from the same IP address(es), and if there's Exchange server, perhaps you could whitelist the IP address(es) on your Exchange server. I have no other suggestions, sorry. "Gregg Hill" wrote in message ... John, I thought rules came after junk filtering as well, but it appears to be the other way around, because the junk filter keeps winning the fight...sometimes. Adding the sender's address would do no good, because the sender is always different. The web contact form uses the email address the person enters and makes that appear as the From address (which, technically, is forging the email, since it is not coming from that person's normal server. That went over like a lead balloon when I pointed it out to the web developer!). Gregg Hill "John" a wrote in message ... If I'm not mistaken, rules get processed after junk mail filter kicks in. How about adding the email address to safe sender list? "Gregg Hill" wrote in message ... Hello! I have a problem with Outlook 2003 SP3 and the Junk Email folder. I have filtering set to Low, and I get emails from a contact page on a web site that always have the same subject. Sometimes, those messages end up in the Junk Email folder, sometimes they end up in the Inbox. I created a rule that says for any email with that subject, move it to the Inbox and stop processing more rules. The problem is that some of the messages STILL end up in the Junk folder. So, how can I stop the Junk Email filter from moving these messages? Is there some hidden way to make them stay in the Inbox? Can rules be scheduled to run? Thank you! Gregg Hill |
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#9
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But it leaves no way to trust email that always has the same subject. Then
again, if the web developer had a brain, they would not have the contact page set up the way that they do. Gregg Hill "Diane Poremsky {MVP}" wrote in message ... rules never applied to messages that were moved to junk email folder - they used to act on mail before the junk email filter - now the junk filter gets the junk out first. -- Diane Poremsky [MVP - Outlook] Author, Teach Yourself Outlook 2003 in 24 Hours Need Help with Common Tasks? http://www.outlook-tips.net/beginner/ Outlook 2007: http://www.slipstick.com/outlook/ol2007/ Outlook Tips by email: Outlook Tips: http://www.outlook-tips.net/ Outlook & Exchange Solutions Center: http://www.slipstick.com Subscribe to Exchange Messaging Outlook newsletter: "Gregg Hill" wrote in message ... "Rules are now designed so that they do not act on messages that are moved to the Junk E-mail folder." I wonder what bright-eyed genius came up with that behavior. Thank you for letting me know! They have POP accounts. I intend to get this domain onto Exchange. Gregg Hill "John" a wrote in message ... What I meant to say was junk mail filter will always "win". from: http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/ou...429671033.aspx "Rules are now designed so that they do not act on messages that are moved to the Junk E-mail folder." If it's coming from the same IP address(es), and if there's Exchange server, perhaps you could whitelist the IP address(es) on your Exchange server. I have no other suggestions, sorry. "Gregg Hill" wrote in message ... John, I thought rules came after junk filtering as well, but it appears to be the other way around, because the junk filter keeps winning the fight...sometimes. Adding the sender's address would do no good, because the sender is always different. The web contact form uses the email address the person enters and makes that appear as the From address (which, technically, is forging the email, since it is not coming from that person's normal server. That went over like a lead balloon when I pointed it out to the web developer!). Gregg Hill "John" a wrote in message ... If I'm not mistaken, rules get processed after junk mail filter kicks in. How about adding the email address to safe sender list? "Gregg Hill" wrote in message ... Hello! I have a problem with Outlook 2003 SP3 and the Junk Email folder. I have filtering set to Low, and I get emails from a contact page on a web site that always have the same subject. Sometimes, those messages end up in the Junk Email folder, sometimes they end up in the Inbox. I created a rule that says for any email with that subject, move it to the Inbox and stop processing more rules. The problem is that some of the messages STILL end up in the Junk folder. So, how can I stop the Junk Email filter from moving these messages? Is there some hidden way to make them stay in the Inbox? Can rules be scheduled to run? Thank you! Gregg Hill |
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