Some of my team members are finding that they are unable to create tasks from certain emails because they are marked as spam. This is not a Gmail issue to my knowledge because they are not marked spam within Gmail, only by the Asana integration specifically.
Loved how caramelized the spam gets! Thank you for finding out and sharing this method. I remember reading this in your cookbook and was happy to find it again. We have a fresh baby, which caused us to realize our musubi forming plans to be a bit ambitious, so we pivoted and greatly enjoyed this in rice bowl format instead. Will be adding this treat to the rotation.
Has anyone noticed an absurd amount of SPAM on icloud emails? Apple used to have the best filters. I now get upwards of 100 emails every hour in my junk folder. I used to go months before getting even 10 junk emails. What happened to Apple's spam settings?
Please fix it, Apple. My website gets less spam, and it does not utilize your tools. This used to be the most secure email account I had. Something is clearly not right. I have now encountered people not just in these forums, but that I actually know in real life, who are encountering the same issues, and the OS version seems to be a triviality.
Just posting what I did and "maybe" it will work for someone else. It's not an easy fix but my spam has been significantly reduced!! Today , there was one. This has been an issue for me since 11/22 so don't expect miracles ! At first I was following another posters recommendation to "forward as messages" to 'report...@apple.com and also 'ab...@icloud.com". But honestly, the "report fishing" generates an auto answer from apple and that just completely overloaded my junk box! Then I started to just "block contact" on every single spam email. I set up rules for all of this.....still no luck. Finally I just reported everything everyday to the 'abuse' (that doesn't generate a reply from apple) and lo and behold ....it's been a week of a significant reduction. I hope this works for longer than one week....and hopefully maybe it will help someone else.
I have the same issue, and it happened very suddenly. I am getting a TON of spam in my iCloud account, and no amount of messing with the junk filter seems to help. I will wake up to 180 messages in my inbox that I marked as junk the day prior. What the heck happened? The filter was working great before.
I explained several times that I've had this email address for over 20 years, and yet only in the last few months has there been a very noticeable increase in spam. also that there is this thread in discussions and that I am not alone.
In order to run online on-demand courses for non-students, we have to enable open registration. This makes us vulnerable to spam users and, since March, we have been attacked repeatedly with spam user accounts. They don't do anything in Canvas, just create accounts.
When we reached out to Canvas, besides disabling open registration (which isn't an option for us), they provided no other solutions. There was a similar spam issue with Catalog and a CAPTCHA has now been implemented there. It's possible that a CAPTCHA could be added to the log in page as well, but it is not definite and there is no project completion date for it.
I was wondering if anyone else has been this issue with spam users recently. If so, has anyone come up with a workaround to prevent more spam users? I know it might be a no go but figured I'd throw it out there to folks that might be better coders than I am!
@caroline_foley Do you have ePortfolios enabled in your Canvas account? If so, you may want to check whether these spam accounts are creating ePortfolios. We and other institutions have found ePortfolios associated with these no-enrollment spam accounts that are peddling goods or other things that are against our Acceptable Use policy. If you have this issue, and your normal users aren't using the ePortfolio feature, your Canvas CSM should be able to turn off ePortfolios.
An electronic message is "spam" if (A) the recipient's personal identity and context are irrelevant because the message is equally applicable to many other potential recipients; AND (B) the recipient has not verifiably granted deliberate, explicit, and still-revocable permission for it to be sent.
Spam is an issue about consent, not content. Whether the Unsolicited Bulk Email ("UBE") message is an advert, a scam, porn, a begging letter or an offer of a free lunch, the content is irrelevant - if the message was sent unsolicited and in bulk then the message is spam.
This distinction is important because legislators spend inordinate amounts of time attempting to regulate the content of spam messages, and in doing so come up against free speech issues, without realizing that the spam issue is solely about consent.
Various jurisdictions have implemented legislation to control what they call "spam". One particular example is US S.877 (CAN-SPAM Act 2004). Each law addresses "spam" in different ways, and as a consequence, often has different definitions of what they cover, whether they call it "spam" or not. Spamhaus uses the industry standard definition "Unsolicited Bulk Email" which underlines that "it's not about content, it's about consent". As such, arguments as to whether Unsolicited Bulk Email messages are covered under CAN-SPAM or are compliant with CAN-SPAM, are entirely irrelevant.
Botnet C&Cs play a vital role in operations conducted by cybercriminals who are using infected machines to send out spam or ransomware, launch DDoS attacks, commit e-banking fraud or click fraud, or mine cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin.
I saw a post saying that there was a spam filter in beta about two years ago, but what is Zoom doing to stop spam calls right now, in 2023? We just switched over from RingCentral about a month ago with 200+ numbers and the amount of spam calls we are getting now are absolutely over-the-top.
I can't help but notice I never got daily spam popups warning me of the $99 charge when my account renewed for another year. But the moment I turn auto-renewal off, I get asked to turn it on almost every single day. But yeah, a "Stop Spamming McAfee Popups" feature would be nice. This very reason is why I'm planning to drop McAfee and switching to someone else. It's also why I can't recommend McAfee to anyone.
These are driving me crazy. Unfortunately, my experience with Norton is even worse. Looking now for another alternative to McAfee *and* Norton, because there's no way I can put up with this spam on my desktop.
Set of functions for sparse matrix algebra. Differences with other sparse matrix packages are: (1) we only support (essentially) one sparse matrix format, (2) based on transparent and simple structure(s), (3) tailored for MCMC calculations within G(M)RF. (4) and it is fast and scalable (with the extension package spam64). Documentation about 'spam' is provided by vignettes included in this package, see also Furrer and Sain (2010) ; see 'citation("spam")' for details.
And in 2009, Vinny Dotolo and Jon Shook of LA's Animal created a cult classic mash-up with their Spam and foie gras loco moco, re-imaging the Hawaiian dish with Carolina gold rice, hamburger patty, foie gras, and Spam straight from the can. The spam-and-foie loco moco, which Dotolo says was inspired by his curiosity toward Hawaiian food, soon became an icon: When Animal was profiled later that year in both the New York Times and The New Yorker, its use of Spam and foie in one dish became the emblem of the restaurant's "giddy, sophisticated-stoner sensibility."
"You really can't change the fabric of who you are," says Behne of the product's kitschy reputation. "We have to embrace it and work with it." To wit: Austin, Minnesota's Spam Museum, which features a mock canning line and exhibits about historic label design and Monty Python. (The comedy group's now-iconic "Spam" sketch birthed not only the name of Monty Python's musical but also the internet usage of "spam" to describe annoying, indiscriminately sent emails.)
Other than the reply email domain name (which clearly here is spam/phishing), other giveaway is if you hover over any links to see where that will go to. Also even if Canon is in the host name, I would not click it as mentioned. Could be variation on that (checking certificate is an option but better to not even check).
In short, no. Apparently Checkpoint uses their own spam fu to identify spam messages using what they call spam patterns. No disclosure on what they are, the methods involved and therefore no hint on how to prevent those. This costed us 12 days of communications havoc with some of our business partners who had their messages tagged as spam due to...something. Truth be told, false positives are scarce with Checkpoint gateways. In this case, the spam pattern was in our own mail corporate signatures. We are not detecting spam outbound and when the messages began being replied, well...you get the idea.
Hence the question, as the messages themselves are clean and free of malware and/or spam. The anti spam engine logs only show a cath all "Spam Rejected" message and we have no way to find out exactly why - no details on the reason why they are tagged are presented.
You are right to complain, as I feel like we were sold damaged goods! We are getting more spam then ever. Had tickets open with CP for a few weeks now. Wow, Cisco ESA that was 12 years old did a much better job! Terrible design. Geo policy doesn't even work on MTA. (3200 series)
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