![]() The reason some spam messages were getting through to your inbox is that you were using Outlook’s Mark as Junk command (which basically does nothing) instead of SpamSieve’s Train as Spam command. No POP accounts My problem is that I can find no way to create an All Junk mailbox in favorites, (or any other mailbox) in. Apple Mail since the server filter applies regardless of which client you are using. Is the problem that you can’t select All Junk in the SpamSieve rule, too Or only that you can’t add it to Mail’s sidebar under Favorites Tommmy (Tommmy) September 29, 2021, 4:59pm 5. It was the server filter, not SpamSieve, that was getting rid of your good messages. ![]() To recap from your original post in this thread: Some server filters can also be configured (from the web) to always accept messages from certain addresses that are important to you. But the best solution, if you have a server-side filter that’s misbehaving, is to turn it off. Currently, this works with Apple Mail but not Outlook. SpamSieve has a feature where it can rescue good messages that were incorrectly caught by a server filter. Having a server-side filter just means that there may be a little less work for SpamSieve to do because some spam will already have been moved out of the inbox before it got to your Mac. The primary purpose of SpamSieve is to get spam messages out of your inbox. It’s trying to fix something on the client-side that’s already been done incorrectly on the server-side. I believe I understand better why SpamSieve doesn’t work very well with Outlook for Mac 2016. I don’t need a command that moves an email to Junk once, but never again automatically. P.S.–It appears from that same support article that the Mark as Junk (or Good) commands do almost nothing in Outlook for Mac 2016, unless you connect to an Exchange server. This process would have to repeated over and over since the server-side never syncs with any junk filtering done on the client-side. For SpamSieve to function properly, it would have to identify that label and strip it off before performing a new filtering process unbiased by the server-side label AND remember that sender so future emails from the same sender are again stripped of the Junk label. I don’t know how your Outlook scripts work, but it appears to me that suspect email arrives to my Outlook email app with a Junk label already attached. Nothing done client-side will sync with the mail server. In a nutshell, starting with Outlook for Mac 2016, all junk mail filtering is done server-side. ![]() After Michael’s last reply, I contacted Microsoft support. After completing uninstalling SpamSieve, Outlook for Mac 2016 is still incorrectly filtering email. ![]()
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