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Block all email not properly addressed to my account

  • 2 个回答
  • 1 人有此问题
  • 5 次查看
  • 最后回复者为 Harster

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Someone got my email address and now I'm getting lots of junk mail but it is all addressed to addresses other than my email account. My email address is a certain string of letters @gmail.com, but the junk I'm getting is addressed to entirely different letters and nearly always @somekindofnonsense or any other string other than @gmail.com. How can I block these emails? Please be specific because I'm an old guy just struggling to keep up with technology. Can you tell me step-by-step how to block them? THANK YOU!

Someone got my email address and now I'm getting lots of junk mail but it is all addressed to addresses other than my email account. My email address is a certain string of letters @gmail.com, but the junk I'm getting is addressed to entirely different letters and nearly always @somekindofnonsense or any other string other than @gmail.com. How can I block these emails? Please be specific because I'm an old guy just struggling to keep up with technology. Can you tell me step-by-step how to block them? THANK YOU!

被采纳的解决方案

Hello, Harster. Sender/recipient e-mail masking is commonly used to display sender/recipient name instead of real e-mail address for better user experience. YOUR real e-mail address can be found in e-mail headers (CTRL+U on a selected message) though, but I don't think it's needed in your case. Looks like spammer uses this masking functionality to mask your address with @somekindofnonsense. If you want to block these e-mails, you must find the SENDER'S e-mail address (CTRL + U can be used for this too. Search form the "From:" field) and crate a filter to delete them automatically (or move them to another folder etc.) using (Tools > Message Filters > New) and enter this email in criteria (From > contains > {spammer@email}) alongside with other needed fields. For this approach to work sender should use the same e-mail address every time, which can be not the case. Another approach to this problem, if you have configured your Gmail's account in Thunderbird as IMAP (to check - right-click on your e-mail account in Thunderbird > Settings > Server Settings > Server Type:), would be to tech Gmail to recognize these email as scam by selecting "Report spam" for every of them for a couple of days when connected to your Gmail inbox through web browser (like Google Chrome, etc.). This way in the future these type of mail should be put directly to the Spam folder in Thunderbird too.

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选择的解决方案

Hello, Harster. Sender/recipient e-mail masking is commonly used to display sender/recipient name instead of real e-mail address for better user experience. YOUR real e-mail address can be found in e-mail headers (CTRL+U on a selected message) though, but I don't think it's needed in your case. Looks like spammer uses this masking functionality to mask your address with @somekindofnonsense. If you want to block these e-mails, you must find the SENDER'S e-mail address (CTRL + U can be used for this too. Search form the "From:" field) and crate a filter to delete them automatically (or move them to another folder etc.) using (Tools > Message Filters > New) and enter this email in criteria (From > contains > {spammer@email}) alongside with other needed fields. For this approach to work sender should use the same e-mail address every time, which can be not the case. Another approach to this problem, if you have configured your Gmail's account in Thunderbird as IMAP (to check - right-click on your e-mail account in Thunderbird > Settings > Server Settings > Server Type:), would be to tech Gmail to recognize these email as scam by selecting "Report spam" for every of them for a couple of days when connected to your Gmail inbox through web browser (like Google Chrome, etc.). This way in the future these type of mail should be put directly to the Spam folder in Thunderbird too.

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Thanks very much gacuxz! I very much appreciate your help. I have not yet taught Gmail to recognize spam, as in your last paragraph, but I will do that soon. Thanks again.