Paul
Fri Jun 11 11:51:52 CDT 2004
Then it must be your ISP doing this, farfetched as this sounds. Ask your ISP
if they're using some software which prefixes "[SPAM] " and tell them they
must have the settings all wrong if it's doing that on every single email
message. (They may tell you that _you_ have some setting which has that
result, I suppose, but it sounds crazy to me.)
--
Paul Berkowitz
MVP Entourage
Entourage FAQ Page: <
http://www.entourage.mvps.org/faq/index.html>
AppleScripts for Entourage: <
http://macscripter.net/scriptbuilders/>
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or 2001. It's often impossible to answer your questions otherwise.
> From: Dan O'Brien <dobrien@obrienresearch.com>
> Newsgroups: microsoft.public.mac.office.entourage
> Date: Fri, 11 Jun 2004 11:50:06 -0400
> Subject: Re: Every email is labeled [SPAM] despite sender in address book
>
> Paul -
>
> Checked my mail rules and *no* rules have been set for any email flavor
> (POP, IMAP, etc.). Any other ideas?
>
> Dan
>
>
> On 6/11/04 11:15 AM, in article BCEF1A9D.68298%berkowit@spoof_silcom.com,
> "Paul Berkowitz" <berkowit@spoof_silcom.com> wrote:
>
>> On 6/11/04 7:40 AM, in article 1afbe01c44fc2$197193a0$a601280a@phx.gbl,
>> "Dan" <anonymous@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
>>
>>> I haven't seen a mention of this, but *every* incoming
>>> email is labeled "[SPAM]" immediately before the subject.
>>> This appears to have nothing to do with the Junk E-mail
>>> folder, which properly identifies (for the most part) real
>>> spam. These labeled emails arrive in my normal inbox. I've
>>> dutifully added most senders' names to my address book, but
>>> it doesn't seem to affect the next email from that sender,
>>> and when I reply -- unless I remember to manually delete it
>>> -- the word SPAM is in the subject line. Not cool. Any
>>> ideas on how to correct this?
>>
>> You must have a Rule running on All Messages. The Rule is probably running
>> an AppleScript. Check your Mail Rules. You may want to disable this rule
>> totally, or to be more specific as to which messages it should run on (maybe
>> "Is junk mail"?) The rule and script may be part of a setup for some utility
>> you've bought or downloaded but you would have had to set up the rule
>> yourself. It looks as if you didn't do it quite right.
>