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The Technical Zone... The Geeky forum... Use this forum to discuss technical aspects of email, from authentication protocols to encryption. |
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#1 |
The "e" in e-mail
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Holon, Israel.
Posts: 4,716
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Why would a reply to a message be classified as spam?
Recently someone told me that a reply I sent to his message went into his spam folder (and that's why he responded days later).
Now the message he originally sent to me had this header: Code:
Message-ID: <DB7PR01MB50775DCDFBC3CFEA5C5C145989F99@DB7PR01MB5077.eurprd01.prod.exchangelabs.com> Code:
References: <DB7PR01MB50775DCDFBC3CFEA5C5C145989F99@DB7PR01MB5077.eurprd01.prod.exchangelabs.com> A Message-ID header contains a unique identifier of an email message, and is commonly generated using a random string so it cannot be forged by someone who doesn't have the original message. The References header contains the message-ID's of previous messages in a conversation (the message-ID header of the messaged being forwarded or replies to, and possibly additional message-ID's from the References header of that message). So if an email system receives a message that has a message-ID string that it has created in the past, it should be able to recognize it and avoid classification of the reply as spam (certainly if also the recipient of the response is the sender of the message for which that Message-ID was generated). Do spam classifiers actually use the References header to recognize responses to email that originated from their own system? |
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#2 |
The "e" in e-mail
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: EU
Posts: 4,902
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Maybe I'm missing something obvious, but why do you think that a reply to a message cannot contain spam?
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#3 |
Cornerstone of the Community
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Rupert, WV
Posts: 843
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Well a reply can contain spam, or what the email provider might consider to be spam, but hadaso most probably didn't intentionally spam although his reply might've contained a link which could've been interpreted as spam. Or maybe the body of the message had some word(s) that might be 'spammy key-words'.
- Bruce |
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#4 |
The "e" in e-mail
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Holon, Israel.
Posts: 4,716
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Of course there is the theoretical possibility that someone replies to an email that they received and include some unsolicited advertising material. Does that make it spam?
Usually we use the word spam to describe the same (unsolicited) advertising content being sent to a multitude of recipients, not to (unsolicited) advertising material sent to one or a few recipients in response to previous communications they willingly participated in. One type of spam that I did see in replies to email I sent is the advertising lines (and graphics) that some companies add to every outgoing email their employees send. It's annoying, but I still want to receive these emails since they contain information I need to get (responses to emails I sent), and the unsolicited advertising content only rides on the legitimate message i want to receive. |
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#5 |
The "e" in e-mail
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: EU
Posts: 4,902
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I never assumed that any spam filter does, or should, take into consideration whether the message is a reply.
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#6 | |
The "e" in e-mail
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Holon, Israel.
Posts: 4,716
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Quote:
It is extremely unlikely that a real spam message would contain the message-ID of a message the recipient sent earlier. It is much more likely that the recipient expects that response, or at least would prefer to receive it. |
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#7 |
Master of the @
Join Date: Feb 2017
Location: USA
Posts: 1,530
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I can definitely confirm that just because you are replying to someone's email does not guarantee your reply won't end up in their spam or junk folder. Different email systems have very different ways of flagging spam. I have certain correspondents I have been in touch with for years that periodically go into my junk folder, and my email goes into their folder no matter what we do. The most recent memorable incident was my reply to someone contacting me with a job for my business. I replied and my email disappeared into his Junk folder.
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#8 |
Master of the @
Join Date: Feb 2005
Location: USA
Posts: 1,732
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Alot of my emails are sent to ppls spam folders and I dont know why!!
Happens alot on Yahoo..... |
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#9 |
Essential Contributor
Join Date: Jan 2017
Posts: 257
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I have heard of individual admins who have done something like this with SpamAssassin, they store outgoing IDs in in a database that's read during scanning. As it links outgoing mail with scanning it's more likely to be done on a proprietary basis which means it's hard to say who is doing it.
It's not completely safe either as it's possible to get IDs from mailing lists. FWIW I used to configure my clients to use an anonymous looking free sub-domain in the message-id. If it showed-up in replies I took-off a few points in SpamAssassin, or handled it in sieve. |
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