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Why do I get this message "Thunderbird thinks this message is a scam. The links in the message ...... "

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This message ONLY, so far, appears when I go to the Readers Digest Prize Draw page [website@readersdigest.co.uk]. The site is not a scam but Thunderbird thinks it is. I have Marked the daily e-mail as Not Junk but it has no effect. How do I stop this happening every morning? It only started a few weeks ago.

This message ONLY, so far, appears when I go to the Readers Digest Prize Draw page [website@readersdigest.co.uk]. The site is not a scam but Thunderbird thinks it is. I have Marked the daily e-mail as Not Junk but it has no effect. How do I stop this happening every morning? It only started a few weeks ago.

被采纳的解决方案

Thunderbird has a rather simplistic scam detection system. If it sees links to "other" sites in an email message it reports it as a possible scam. This affects many legitimate mails that quite reasonably offer links to other sites.

Unfortunately, your options are to suffer as it is, or switch off the scam detection altogether. There are no settings to teach it or to set safe sites. :-(

Unlike spam detection, it pays no attention to the from: address. If the sender is in your Address Book, they should never be identified as spam.

My personal bugbear are those messages that come from magazines and the like, with a unique and apparently randomized from: address each time. You can't add these to Thunderbird's Address Book to effectively whitelist them.

I hear rumours that the Address Book is being revamped and hopefully both the scam identification and the possibility to whitelist by domain will be included as part of the improvements.

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选择的解决方案

Thunderbird has a rather simplistic scam detection system. If it sees links to "other" sites in an email message it reports it as a possible scam. This affects many legitimate mails that quite reasonably offer links to other sites.

Unfortunately, your options are to suffer as it is, or switch off the scam detection altogether. There are no settings to teach it or to set safe sites. :-(

Unlike spam detection, it pays no attention to the from: address. If the sender is in your Address Book, they should never be identified as spam.

My personal bugbear are those messages that come from magazines and the like, with a unique and apparently randomized from: address each time. You can't add these to Thunderbird's Address Book to effectively whitelist them.

I hear rumours that the Address Book is being revamped and hopefully both the scam identification and the possibility to whitelist by domain will be included as part of the improvements.