Updated FAQ

pull/213/head
M66B 1 year ago
parent 21734def67
commit 1d0b0530b1

@ -3230,6 +3230,9 @@ If you are wondering why a message was moved into the spam folder, these are all
* A filter rule (navigation menu = left side menu of the start screen), for example a block domain name rule, moved the message into the spam folder. * A filter rule (navigation menu = left side menu of the start screen), for example a block domain name rule, moved the message into the spam folder.
* An email address or a network address is on a block list (receive settings tab page). * An email address or a network address is on a block list (receive settings tab page).
Note that a sender will automatically be blocked when a message is moved into the spam folder.
You can disable this behavior by disabling the option *Automatically block the sender when reporting spam* in the behavior settings tab page.
If you receive a lot of spam messages in your inbox, the best you can do is to contact the email provider to ask if spam filtering can be improved. If you receive a lot of spam messages in your inbox, the best you can do is to contact the email provider to ask if spam filtering can be improved.
Also, FairEmail can show a small red warning flag Also, FairEmail can show a small red warning flag

@ -1707,6 +1707,7 @@ Y1 OK CAPABILITY completed</code></pre>
<li>A filter rule (navigation menu = left side menu of the start screen), for example a block domain name rule, moved the message into the spam folder.</li> <li>A filter rule (navigation menu = left side menu of the start screen), for example a block domain name rule, moved the message into the spam folder.</li>
<li>An email address or a network address is on a block list (receive settings tab page).</li> <li>An email address or a network address is on a block list (receive settings tab page).</li>
</ul> </ul>
<p>Note that a sender will automatically be blocked when a message is moved into the spam folder. You can disable this behavior by disabling the option <em>Automatically block the sender when reporting spam</em> in the behavior settings tab page.</p>
<p>If you receive a lot of spam messages in your inbox, the best you can do is to contact the email provider to ask if spam filtering can be improved.</p> <p>If you receive a lot of spam messages in your inbox, the best you can do is to contact the email provider to ask if spam filtering can be improved.</p>
<p>Also, FairEmail can show a small red warning flag when DKIM, SPF or <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DMARC">DMARC</a> authentication failed on the receiving server. You can enable/disable <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Email_authentication">authentication verification</a> in the display settings.</p> <p>Also, FairEmail can show a small red warning flag when DKIM, SPF or <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DMARC">DMARC</a> authentication failed on the receiving server. You can enable/disable <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Email_authentication">authentication verification</a> in the display settings.</p>
<p>FairEmail can show a warning flag too if the domain name of the (reply) email address of the sender does not define an MX record pointing to an email server. This can be enabled in the receive settings. Be aware that this will slow down synchronization of messages significantly.</p> <p>FairEmail can show a warning flag too if the domain name of the (reply) email address of the sender does not define an MX record pointing to an email server. This can be enabled in the receive settings. Be aware that this will slow down synchronization of messages significantly.</p>

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