At the Server
Corporations and Internet Service Providers (ISPs) have been deploying increasingly aggressive spam filtering to combat this onslaught of junk and malicious e-mail. Today there are as many as five possible dispositions for e-mail arriving at a server owned by the service provider:
- Discard the e-mail when identified as blatant spam
- Place the e-mail in a separate spam folder in the user's e-mail account
- Tag the e-mail as possible spam and place it in the user's e-mail inbox
- Remove detected malicious software content from the e-mail and place the “disinfected e-mail” in the user's inbox, with notification of the action taken
- Place the unaltered email in the user's e-mail inbox
- Designate whether the service provider should place suspected spam in a spam folder
- Designate e-mails tagged as possible spam as being not spam.
- Designate e-mails that should be treated as spam, but were not tagged by the server.
- Add a sender's e-mail address to the recipient's contact list on the server. Many service providers use a recipient's contact list as a “white list” of addresses whose e-mail should not be treated as spam.
- Select a level of spam filtering sensitivity, possibly with separate thresholds for immediate discard and for spam tagging of e-mails.
On the e-mail user's computer, the client software for handling e-mail has gained features to help the user to filter out the spam that remains after the first level of processing by the e-mail server belonging to a corporation or ISP. In the case using a browser-based e-mail client (i.e. web-mail client), most of the features are those available at the server. A user can typically also create custom filters for handling e-mails according to criteria chosen by the user.
In the case of dedicated e-mail client software running on the user's computer, such as Mozilla Thunderbird or Microsoft Outlook, customization of the built-in spam filtering can be accomplished through one or more of the following actions by the user:
- Designate what to do with e-mails automatically tagged by the client software or the server as possible spam. Options may include: discard, save in a spam folder, remove tag.
- Mark additional e-mails as spam that were not previously tagged as spam. This typically trains the client software to recognize possible spam, tailoring the spam recognition profile to the individual user.
- Un-mark e-mails tagged by the client software as possible spam, in the case where the user considers the e-mail to be not spam.
- Add a sender's e-mail address to the recipient's contact list in the client software. Many client programs use a recipient's contact list as a “white list” of addresses whose e-mail should not be treated as spam.
- Set up filters to handle e-mails according to tags, From: addresses, To: addresses, Subject line or body content, etc.
The above observations are based on my own experience with one Internet service provider, one corporate e-mail system, and at least six e-mail client programs. Comments and additional observations are welcome.
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