On Thu, Nov 20, 2014 at 3:14 AM, Michael Safrin <[email protected]>
wrote:

> Please help!
> Spam in my gmail account has up until recently been kept well under
> control.  But earlier today I've noticed an overwhelming flood of spam in
> my inbox that is unprecedented and out of control. Even after using some
> gmail tricks on controlling spam such as using gmail's unsubscribing tool,
>

That was probably a mistake.  ​I would never use that on Spam.  You are
asking Gmail to send an email reply back to the spammers, and that reply
tells them that your account is still active and that you read their
messages ... in other words, you are a prime target for even more spam!
Never respond to spam, not in any way, shape, or form.  Responding is how
you end up on lots of spammer's lists.

the unsubscribe messages are being returned as undeliverable.
>

​Not surprising.

No spammer ever takes an unsubscribe request seriously anyway.

I've tried tackling each spam message one by one
>

​In what way are you tackling each of them?

The ONLY thing you should be doing with them, is marking them as Spam.

I realize part of the problem is that spam arrives daily from a source that
> has gotten hold of my email and continues to send spam.
>

​That's a problem, and there isn't much you can do about it.

If you can somehow figure out who or what is sending them all, you might
contact the authorities (how?) and have THEM deal with it and try to shut
them down.  Most spam makes this impossible.​

It seems the ability for gmail to filter spam as effectively as it had once
> had has been lessened to a considerable degree.
>

There are a few reasons for that.  One, you may have responded to the
emails, even if by asking to unsubscribe from them.  It may sound
counter-intuitive, but this might tell Gmail that this sender is one you
care about (any address you reply to must be important to you), and
therefore they shouldn't go into Spam.  They may have ended up on your
Contacts list because of that.  That's why it's important to keep marking
those messages as Spam, and do only that.  Also, the spammers are clever
about circumventing the filters, making their messages look more like
"normal" messages (to the electronic scanners but not to the eye).

Can you offer any suggestions on re-enabling gmail to filter spam in the
> highly successful manner it once did.
>

​I'm sure your account's spam filter is still enabled.  What you should do
is continue to re-train it​, by marking every message as Spam, and never do
anything else with them.

Also check your Gmail Contacts to see who you may have inadvertently added
to it.

If all else fails (and it can take a while to re-train your spam filter),
and if all those messages are coming from the same source which is
recognizable in every spam message, you could make a Filter to delete them
as they arrive.  Then you won't see them, but it doesn't let Gmail's spam
filter learn from you that they are really spam.  Consider that a last
resort.  I don't think you are there yet.  Give Gmail's spam filter another
month to learn from you.

It's also wise to not even open spam messages.  Graphics files in them can
tell the sender that you opened them, hence that their spam was received
and read.

Regards,
Andy

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