Markverhyden
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 11,026
- Location
- Raleigh, NC
Wondering if anyone has any ideas on this. The customer's O365 provider is Godaddy, which they got on their own. iMac Outlook 2013 on OS X 10.11, MBP same, and a new iPhone and iPad both updated.
One user said some time ago he marked a sender as junk and accidentally did a second sender on his iMac. The second one is now a potential huge customer of theirs. He has clicked on the "this is not spam" on emails in Outlook with no change so I get involved. I started by pushing a rule so that emails from this user get moved to the Inbox. No luck. The senders domain is clean on mxtoolbox.com. Nothing in the email body contains the typical stuff that triggers spam filters.
This is definitely a server side issue as he sees this on all his devices. I've logged into their ECP and put in the following rules.
recipients>contacts added the email as a contact
mail flow>rules added the domain with bypass spam
protection>spam filter>edit default rule to put the email address as well as the domain itself in the allow list
Did this the day before yesterday and he came back a few hours later and said another email landed in junk. I would expect the rule changes to take effect within an hour or so, tops. Unfortunately this is low volume so I may go a day or two until another arrives. Next step is to connect with powershell since there is more granularity using that technique.
Any ideas? As always thanks in advance.
One user said some time ago he marked a sender as junk and accidentally did a second sender on his iMac. The second one is now a potential huge customer of theirs. He has clicked on the "this is not spam" on emails in Outlook with no change so I get involved. I started by pushing a rule so that emails from this user get moved to the Inbox. No luck. The senders domain is clean on mxtoolbox.com. Nothing in the email body contains the typical stuff that triggers spam filters.
This is definitely a server side issue as he sees this on all his devices. I've logged into their ECP and put in the following rules.
recipients>contacts added the email as a contact
mail flow>rules added the domain with bypass spam
protection>spam filter>edit default rule to put the email address as well as the domain itself in the allow list
Did this the day before yesterday and he came back a few hours later and said another email landed in junk. I would expect the rule changes to take effect within an hour or so, tops. Unfortunately this is low volume so I may go a day or two until another arrives. Next step is to connect with powershell since there is more granularity using that technique.
Any ideas? As always thanks in advance.