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Check Your Spam Folder

Check Your Spam Folder It’s sad that we’ve arrived at a place where it needs to be said. Unfortunately, 3rd-party email services such as Yahoo, Hotmail, Gmail, and so forth have to deal with tons and tons of spam. So they tend to use very aggressive spam-filtering rules. Overly aggressive, in many cases.

In my 20 years working online, I’ve sent and received many thousands of emails. Over the years, I’ve seen an increase in the number of false positives when it comes to Gmail et al blocking spam. In some cases, such 3rd-party services even block replies to your own messages. So for example:

  1. You write an email to someone
  2. The recipient gets your email and replies
  3. Gmail blocks the reply, sending it to spam folder

That first happened to me several years ago. Since then, I am seeing it happen much more frequently, as email services obviously are getting increasingly desperate to fight spam. Too desperate, apparently. When you have to dig around in the spam or trash folder to find the replies from your own recipients, well. That’s pretty pathetic.

So this post is to help spread the word. For anyone using 3rd-party email services:

Check Your Spam Folder

Check it frequently — as frequently as you check your inbox. Thanks to overly aggressive email filtering, it’s important do this as part of your daily routine. If you haven’t done so already. Personally, I stopped using 3rd-party email services for serious correspondence around seven years ago, for a wide variety of reasons.

Domain-based email FTW

These days I stick with domain-based email for all important communication. Domain-based email is handled by your own server, so you have complete control over every aspect of filtering, handling spam, bounces, relays, and everything in between. Using my own domain-based account for email works incredibly well and is very private and secure. I would never go back to 3rd-party shenanigans.

For those not familiar, a domain-based email address looks like this:

yourname@example.com

Compare with typical addresses from various 3rd-party services:

yourname123456@yahoo.com
yourname202006@hotmail.com
thereal_yourname123@gmail.com

..and so forth. Here you can see another benefit to domain-based email: you get the username you want, rather than compromising by adding some number or random characters to find a name that isn’t already taken. In other words you@domain.com rocks a lot harder than you_ItsTheRealMe2024@gmail.com or whatever shady looking name you manage to scrounge up at the bottom of the Gmail bargain bin.

Domain-based email is handled by your own server, provided by a web host. So if you’ve already got a host for your website or whatever, you’re more than halfway there. In most cases setting up domain-based email is a breeze. Any decent web host will be more than happy to help you get set up in a jiffy.

Important: For domain-based email to work properly, it must be configured correctly. To be sure, you can use any good free online tool to check your email setup. Just search for something like check email configuration online and you’ll get tons of free tools for testing and more.

60 second summary

So let’s sum up:

3rd-party email services Domain-based email
Cost no money, but you sacrifice privacy Pay per month or year, prices range from free to expensive, better privacy
Provides a user-interface and lots of options May provide a user-interface, and/or you can use any mail app with many options
Uses aggressive email-filtering which frequently sends legitimate email to the spam bin or blocks entirely Gives you control over spam filters, very low rates of false positives, so legit email never is blocked
Email address usually looks cheap, spammy You choose the exact email address you want, looks professional and reputable

There are other pros and cons, but you get the idea.

Bottom line: if you use Gmail, Hotmail, Yahoo, or any free 3rd-party service, make it a habit to check your spam folder. You might be surprised at what you’re missing.

About the Author
Jeff Starr = Web Developer. Book Author. Secretly Important.
The Tao of WordPress: Master the art of WordPress.

2 responses to “Check Your Spam Folder”

  1. Jim S. Smith 2022/04/14 12:58 pm

    Yahoo’s “spam-filter” does NOT respect when I go to the “junk” folder and tag certain emails as “not junk”. Kind of makes it pointless to even have such a button on the page in the first place, if it doesn’t even work!

    Therefore,

    I simply switched over to another email service. Got tired of missing out on business-related and other important notifications!

    I miss the days when you could specify which domains you wanted to always allow from. Now, Yahoo’s email-filtering system doesn’t even give you THAT option.

    • Jeff Starr 2022/04/14 4:30 pm

      I’ve tried many of the big “free” 3rd-party email services. None of them are suitable for business purposes. The high rate of false positive spam is just unacceptable, and reason enough to avoid them for anything serious. Lots of other reasons too, such as what you mention with Yahoo’s filtering system, etc. Microsoft as well is just absolutely horrible when it comes to filtering, spam control, respecting user preferences, and so much more.

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Perishable Press is operated by Jeff Starr, a professional web developer and book author with two decades of experience. Here you will find posts about web development, WordPress, security, and more »
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