No (E)Mail Today

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Do you bother to “unsubscribe” from “junk” and other unsolicited “emails?

 

I generally just hit delete. I found it quick enough as I processed emails.

 

More recently, I moved such “offenders” to my junk folder first.

 

On a spare after hours moment(s), I take to going through the emails, determining which of my emails the solicitation was directed to and clicked unsubscribe. Often the response is to wait some ten days for it to occur. I may do a follow-up to report on this “project” and whether spam and unsolicited emails decrease.

 

Interestingly, some (many?) offending senders use faux addresses not in anyway connected with the name. An example is “NYTimesdirect” and it looks like a real email but clearly not connected to the Times.

 

What I find also is a need to check my preference with various news sites to remove any approval for solicitations.

 

Getting rid of unwanted emails matters because of a quirk I prefer in receiving email. Rather than check multiple emails, I direct all incoming to one box (Yes I can check them separately but it makes more sense to me to get things in real time and handle what makes sense (think clients, anything important from family, especially the wife, in real time). Yes, some may also text; I sometimes will email and text (and call) depending on importance.). The emails not addressed remain easy to find and access without unnecessary and unwanted emails obscuring them.

 

At the same time at least one email provider/internet host seems to spam emails I send to its users. This problem also afflicts many others according to Gotham’s webmaster Mitch Tobol. We encounter this issue sending to folk with optimum.net and optonline.net emails. This often occurs responding to an email from friends and colleagues with that either email. If they have alternative (gmail/yahoo/aol/icloud) emails, the mail goes through. It gets so ridiculous that with a major voluntary organization where I serve as “executive secretary to the grand chancellor” I send also to the gmail account of his “chief deputy grand chancellor” who resends from his optonline account to our Grand Chancellor; all as a backup. We find some emails go through and others do not with no rhyme or reason. My recommendation: any optimum (Altice) user avoid using the provider’s email. While my provided advises when emails do not go through; not every provider does this and I would believe most senders of email want to make sure the intended recipient does receive same. Sort of like A Spider in My Web.

 

I await better efforts to eradicate spam and unnecessary “blockages” of wanted email.

 

Is the alternative just No Mail Today?

 

Want to share you experience?

Comments

Fred Klein

When I first met you your email address was different. Why?
Corey Bearak

It was my first primary email. I encountered an issue where it lost a significant # of added contact ps I added after that year’s election. I took on an Apple email and never looked back.
Daniel Schwartz

I do sometimes have problems with some email accounts. Corey, your Apple email must be "allowed" to our secure servers or it bounces. Since we discovered this, I am OK, as my IT staff had to request an exception to allow it, but you may not reach others at my company. I don't understand the rhyme or reason. But to your early point, I do try to unsubscribe to repeat spam senders. It just time and I hate when site asks for your email address to unsubscribe. Always makes we wonder if they are fishing.
Rona Gura

I find it surprising that people use AOL still. I'm also surprised to learn-from reading your blog-that it appears to be a better email recipient than optimum or optonline.
Vincent Russo

There is no magic bullet as you have expressed.
I do as you do and move unwelcome emails to block status which put sit in my junk folder in Microsoft outlook.
But I do not waste my time unsubscribing from the junk folder - I have better things to do with my life.
We are cursed with this problem of unwanted emails.
I promise not to send any Gotham members an email today.
Vincent

Submitted by Steven_Lichtenstein on Sun, 07/21/2019 - 02:36

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Steven Lichtenstein

So I constantly unsubscribe to unwanted emails. I delete without opening to stay safe. I use office 365 so that has a Clutter (span) filter which helps although I do on rare occasion miss some important incoming work emails. I’ve also kept my old AOL account which is rife with spammers. I keep it as a reference and probably have currently over 92,000 archived emails. (They seem to be limitless). Besides work I also have a private gmail address. I only use that for important personal contacts, friends and known vendors I transact with. Gmail is better than AOL but it still creates a lot of backlog that I clear out on a monthly basis.

Submitted by MarilynGenoa on Sun, 07/21/2019 - 03:50

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Marilyn Genoa

What I find especially concerning is that lately, although I believe I am very conscientious about reviewing all incoming mail (whether it is read at that moment or marked 'unread' to address later that day) I realize that I have not seen some important things that have come in.
Corey Bearak

What I find interesting about the asking of which emails involves how many spam, unwanted emails go to my iCloud account that I used not at all.
Corey Bearak

I kept my AOL. I can actually use it to bulk sends as I am "white-listed" there. I have not used the account in years and rarely check it. Since it does not have forwarding setting. I have an away message on it that alerts senders to resend to my Apple email.
Corey Bearak

I unsubscribe while catching a game on TV. And to some extent it involves a test to see if the unwanted email do decline in #. Perhaps a future blog to cover that.
Corey Bearak

I actually deleted most old emails from my AOL account. Anything I wanted to save got moved to my gmail archives.
Corey Bearak

Marilyn you hit the nail on the nose. My biggest concern involves missing that email that matters. It is also why I sometimes text and call as a followup when communicating with clients.

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