Quizzes & Puzzles16 mins ago
clicking on email that is "phishing scam" ?
13 Answers
hi, i keep receiving scam emails,for example from Santander Bank that i have to log in for security reasons.and as i dont have an account with them i know for sure its a scam.
The problem is, i click on that email that is a phishing scam , but after a day i receive the same Santander email again. Microsoft or whoever is checking surely has to make sure i dont receive that mail again, isnt it?? if not, then whats the point for users to click "phishing scam". thanks in advance.
The problem is, i click on that email that is a phishing scam , but after a day i receive the same Santander email again. Microsoft or whoever is checking surely has to make sure i dont receive that mail again, isnt it?? if not, then whats the point for users to click "phishing scam". thanks in advance.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by mk1975. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Googlemail (gmail) makes a very good job of spotting spam and putting it straight in your spam folder.
I dont think any email company would ever NOT send you mail just because they THINK it is spam, after all they may be wrong, though they may warn you (google do).
But I do think it would be nice if the "industry" could get together to spot spam earlier and refuse to distribute it.
>>>Microsoft or whoever is checking
Why do you think Microsoft should be checking email? For most email it probably goes nowhere near anything that Microsoft controls, they are not the only computer company you know.
I dont think any email company would ever NOT send you mail just because they THINK it is spam, after all they may be wrong, though they may warn you (google do).
But I do think it would be nice if the "industry" could get together to spot spam earlier and refuse to distribute it.
>>>Microsoft or whoever is checking
Why do you think Microsoft should be checking email? For most email it probably goes nowhere near anything that Microsoft controls, they are not the only computer company you know.
"Microsoft or whoever is checking surely has to make sure i dont receive that mail again, isnt it?? if not, then whats the point for users to click "phishing scam". "
I can guarantee that nobody at Microsoft is checking your inbox for spam. Clicking on the link or forwarding it on to a bank maybe makes you feel better but it has no effect.
I can guarantee that nobody at Microsoft is checking your inbox for spam. Clicking on the link or forwarding it on to a bank maybe makes you feel better but it has no effect.
"Hotmail" - well, say no more :-)
I think you're only hope is to set up a very severe filter that bungs everything except emails from approved recipients into a trash folder.
Or change to a different email provider. As suggested by VHG, Googlemail is excellent at junk filtering: I use Sky, which I believe uses Googlemail in turn, and I receive no junk whatever.
I think you're only hope is to set up a very severe filter that bungs everything except emails from approved recipients into a trash folder.
Or change to a different email provider. As suggested by VHG, Googlemail is excellent at junk filtering: I use Sky, which I believe uses Googlemail in turn, and I receive no junk whatever.
It's just good customer relations. If they publicly said that there's nothing they can do about them, it wouldn't look too good.
For example: A NatWest email originates from Xi-Duang province in China. The next one comes from Moscow. What steps can they take to stop them? Write to the originator and ask them to stop please?
For example: A NatWest email originates from Xi-Duang province in China. The next one comes from Moscow. What steps can they take to stop them? Write to the originator and ask them to stop please?
''I dont think any email company would ever NOT send you mail just because they THINK it is spam''. AOL ended up red-faced some years ago when, based on the quantity issued, they thought that multiple emails from Harvard University must be spam, and blocked them. The emails were actually informing students of their exam results!
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