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Home > Internet > Spam Filter>Spam Control Instructions - Condensed Version

Spam Control Instructions - Condensed Version

Introduction
Premium Spam Control is your interface for controlling the way the mail server processes your mail. As you're aware by now, you login using your e-mail address and the same password you use to check your mail. You remain "logged in" for up to 24 minutes between page accesses (each time you access one of the Premium Spam Control pages this timer is reset). If you let this expire, you'll be logged out automatically, and will have to login to access your mail filter controls again. If you want to logout explicitly when you're done, of course, you can click the [Logout] link on the toolbar above, or simply close your browser.

Mail Filter Settings
Premium Spam Control allows you to maintain different mail filter settings for the e-mail address you have access to at this site.

E-mail Addresses
Your Primary Address is the e-mail address associated with your Premium Spam Control login. Any mail that Premium Spam Control sends you will be sent to this address. 

Miscellaneous Settings
If you neglect your quarantine, of course, the contents will ultimately be deleted after seven days. 

Add senders of rescued mail to your whitelist? This tells Premium Spam Control to automatically add a sender's e-mail address to your whitelist when you rescue one of his e-mails from your quarantine area. This is a convenient way to make sure that senders’ mail will never be blocked again.

More Settings 
Advanced settings are available by clicking on your e-mail address. 

Virus Scanning enables the mail server to inspect every e-mail you receive to make sure it does not contain any harmful viruses, worms, Trojans, or dangerous macros. If you disable this feature, your mail will not be scanned for viruses. Most users will want to enable virus scanning, but if you have some special needs to collect viruses, you can disable virus scanning here to make sure everything gets through untouched.

Detected viruses should be... lets you specify whether virus-infected files should be quarantined, or whether they should be explicitly labeled with special headers as viruses and delivered to you anyway. If you set this to Quarantined, the virus-infected e-mail will be placed in your quarantine area, where you can review it at your leisure, and recover any items that contain important information (in spite of the virus). In almost all cases you'll simply want to delete these virus-infected e-mails.

Spam Filtering lets the mail server try to determine whether e-mail you receive is legitimate mail or whether it is spam.

Whitelist and Blacklist 
Your whitelist lets you specify that mail coming from specific senders (or entire domains) should not be spam-checked, and should be delivered to you regardless of its content. It's a way of making sure that you don't inadvertently block mail from people you know and trust.

Your blacklist is effectively the opposite of your whitelist—it lets you specify that mail coming from specific senders (or entire domains) should never be delivered to you, under any circumstances. Senders on this list will be blocked regardless of the content of their mail. 

Initially, your whitelist and blacklist are both empty. To add an address to either list, go to your [W/B List] page and enter the address (either in "user@domain" form for a specific sender, or "@domain," or "domain" for an entire domain), select the list (Whitelist or Blacklist) and click the Add to List button. When you reload your Whitelist and Blacklist page you should see the new entry in the table.

False Positives
Your quarantine area is where any captured spam and virus files will be stored, awaiting your review, along with any banned file attachments or mail items with invalid mail headers. These are broken down into several tables by type:

Virus/Malware items (if any) are listed after any spam items. This list is sorted by date, and includes the name of the virus(es) that were found in the mail along with the sender's (supposed) e-mail address and the subject line.

Banned File Attachments (if any) are listed after any virus items. This list is sorted by date, and includes the names of the file attachments that were found in the mail along with the sender's (supposed) e-mail address and the subject line. You can use the Mail Viewer by clicking on the subject line of the mail, if you want to check out the contents of the mail itself, and you can use the [Ham?] option to have the item redelivered if you wish.

As a footnote, when you "confirm spam," you're not just deleting the mail, you're effectively helping to prevent others from receiving that spam in the future. The confirmed spam items are studied by Premium Spam Control's learning engines, and then passed along to other spam-filtering networks on the Internet.

You'll want to check your quarantine area regularly to make sure you haven't missed any important mail, and, of course, to clear out the items that have accumulated since the last time you checked in. Items that go unconfirmed for seven days are automatically deleted, and cannot be submitted to the learning engines, so please try to keep your quarantine area up-to-date.

Mail Viewer 
The Mail Viewer lets you take a look at a quarantined or cached mail item either in its "raw" form or in its decoded HTML form. The mail is first displayed in its decoded form, but you can click on the [View Raw] link to switch to Raw Mode, and the [View Decoded] link returns to Decoded Mode. 

At the top of the page, you'll see a report that lists all of the spam-testing rules that were triggered when the mail was scanned. This helps you understand why a particular mail item was (or wasn't) flagged as spam. The rules are sorted in descending order by score so the ones at the top of the list had the most influence on Premium Spam Control's decision.

For Further Assistance 
If all else fails and your questions haven't been answered here, our Internet Help Desk staff (helpdesk@en-tel.com) would be happy to assist you. To access detailed instructions of Premium Spam Control, click here.

© 2008 Iowa Telecom

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