On 10/4/02 11:07 AM, "Allen Watson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> I do this to save up SPAM and then later run a "Report SPAM" script that
>> forwards them all to the federal and state anti-SPAM addresses.
>> 
> For the few spam messages that slip into the In Box, you can still use
> "Apply Rules" to apply the "Move Junk" rule to them; just mark them as Junk
> first.

I would do that if, like Mail, it would somehow affect how the Junk Mail
Filter worked in the future. But since it doesn't in Entourage, the "Mark
and file SPAM" script is a lot quicker -- I just select messages and hit
control+S -- and a lot better for avoiding RSI ;)  [To apply the rules, I
have to select messages, command+comma, j (for junk), space (to select),
return, control-click, select Apply Rules -> Junk Mail.]


> [The JMF will never mark mail as junk if
> its sender is in the Address Book.]
> 
> 2. Set up a rule (or multiple rules) that automatically files incoming mail
> from your address book and/or group/s into your in box or any folder you
> want and set an action to change the status to "not junk mail."

I have a couple general questions about the JMF that the above reminded me
to ask. First, given that the JMF isn't supposed to mark any message as junk
if the sender is in the address book, why would you need #2 above (to change
status to 'not junk mail')?

Second, I notice that the JMF consistently marks some messages as junk even
if I've previously set the "Classify all messages sent from the sender's
domain as 'not junk'" option. I don't have any other rules that
automatically set message status to "junk" so I'm curious why this might
happen?



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