Unethical e-mail senders bear little or no cost for mass distribution of messages, yet normal e-mail users are forced to spend time and effort purging fraudulent and otherwise unwanted mail from their mailboxes. In this article, I describe ways that computer code can help eliminate unsolicited commercial e-mail, viruses, trojans, and worms, as well as frauds perpetrated electronically and other undesired and troublesome e-mail. In some sense, the final and best solution for eliminating spam will probably take place on a legal level. In the meantime, however, you can do some things from a code perspective that can serve as an interim solution to the problem, until (if ever) the laws begin to evolve at the same rate as public frustration.
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If you still wish to block mail from yourself, there are several ways this can be done. You can also use the same techniques to block mail from any address or domain. There are three different ways to block mail with Domino:
1. At the server — using the deny control of Inbound Sender Controls
2. At the server– using server mail rules
3. At the user’s mail file — using mail rules in the user’s mail file.
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Lotus Notes Mail rules allow you to create content filtering rules that define actions to take on certain messages based on their content. For example, you could reject mail that contains certain words or is from a specific domain.
Server mail rules are configured by the Domino administrator and are stored in the Domino Directory. User level mail rules are also supported and are stored in user’s mail files and configured by each individual user. This section will focus specifically on server mail rules.
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Today Domino server have spam mail too much same as other Mail Server then we need to filter spam from Domino Server for improve performance. Try to follow step below for filter spam from your Domino Server.
Quick Guide to Notes/Domino Mail Control Features
Server Level Control Of Mail
1. DNS Blacklist (DNSBL) Filters:
- Enforcement options: Log only, Log and tag message, Log and reject message
- Custom error response for rejected messages
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I actually set up two Hotmail accounts because I didn’t realize Microsoft had instituted parental controls. During the setup of “NotesTest,” I randomly chose a birth year. Suddenly I was 8 years old again and the program wanted my parents’ permission before completing setup.
When I tried to change my age it wanted my credit card information. Now I was in a loop. I could either get my parents’ permission or give Microsoft a credit card number. To get out of the loop I closed my browser. I could comment that any 8-year-old enterprising enough to set up a Web account would be able to find Mommy’s credit card number, but I won’t. I finally got in as “NotesTestt2″ – an adult – and created some mail.
Microsoft has changed Hotmail to Windows Live Hotmail and the servers are no longer “hotmail.com” but “live.com” making “hotmail.com” an alias. In doing so they limited POP3 capabilities and linked the ID to a number of other programs.
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Step 1
In Gmail, under Settings, “Forwarding and POP/IMAP” select to Enable POP — either for all your mail or everything starting today. “All Mail” appears to have a rolling date and, once you’re set up, it only sees mail newer than 7 days ago that hasn’t already been downloaded. I set up the account on Monday, created some mail, re-installed the Notes client several times over the next few days, and by Friday I wasn’t getting all the messages from the Gmail Inbox. Two weeks later, after several more re-installs, nothing came down.
I needed to reconfigure Gmail to “enable POP for all mail, including mail that’s already been downloaded”.
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