Hi

Yes, the tails may be a red herring. It was just that the 'Spam' messages I rescued were from Eclipse and they all had this tail, which despite the comment in

https://developers.google.com/gmail/markup/actions/declaring-actions

are not ignored by the Thunderbird email client. Surely the EF should ensure that EF messages do not contain what is clearly partial SPAM? Bugzilla was fine.

It appears that contrary to the 0.05% false positive rate claimed for the Gmail Spam filter, it was actually more like 50% for me affecting many senders. Truly abysmal. Any in a folder that requires a couple of scrolling actions to reveal.

    Regards

        Ed Willink

On 09/06/2022 11:36, Arthur van Dorp wrote:
Hi Ed

Not sure those "tails" are to blame. They are actually meant for mail clients 
and Gmail supports those:

https://developers.google.com/gmail/markup/actions/declaring-actions

Regards
Arthur

-----Original Message-----
From: cross-project-issues-dev <cross-project-issues-dev-boun...@eclipse.org> 
On Behalf Of Ed Willink
Sent: Thursday, 9 June, 2022 12:20
To: Cross project issues <cross-project-issues-dev@eclipse.org>
Subject: [cross-project-issues-dev] Solved: Gmail thinks Gitlab is Spam

Hi

I have been complaining recently about lost emails, particularly all those from 
gitlab, github and some from cross-project-dev.

Problem solved. The lost emails have a tail that looks like:

[ { "@context": "http://schema.org";, "@type": "EmailMessage",
"potentialAction": { "@type": "ViewAction", "target":
"https://github.com/eclipse-m2e/m2e-core/pull/735#issuecomment-1150841883","url":
"https://github.com/eclipse-m2e/m2e-core/pull/735#issuecomment-1150841883";,
"name": "View Pull Request" }, "description": "View this Pull Request on GitHub", "publisher": { "@type": 
"Organization", "name": "GitHub",
"url": 
"https://smex-ctp.trendmicro.com:443/wis/clicktime/v1/query?url=https%3a%2f%2fgithub.com&umid=54465e77-e305-480a-8537-dee40869dc31&auth=2553b7ee1b402f6c614d840b79175d8e10d66fea-f28b8dabd5154be63373caed4ac034dbbd4db939";
 } } ]

The latest 'improved' Gmail spam filter is 'clever' enough to regard the tail 
gibberish as a Spam indicator, and so Thunderbird failed to download the 
messages for me.

Unfortunately if you log on to Gmail, the Spam folder is not visible unless you 
scroll the folder list, so I was deceived into thinking there was no 
recoverable personal Spam just lost global Spam.

Once I scrolled and opened the Spam folder, Eureka, there are all the lost 
emails (well 30 days worth). After marking a few as not-Spam, the filter was 
trained and 180 lost emails were available to Thunderbird.

Bottom line. If you use Gmail, review your Spam folder because recent Eclipse 
communications have a junk tail that predisposes them to be treated as Spam.

Surely Eclipse should not be sending messages with such a provocative junk tail?

      Regards

          Ed Willink


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