@tdhargraves I appreciate your feedback and will certainly pass that along.
I've been having this issue too, with client emails that have been fine for years. There doesn't seem to be a way to mark them as 'not junk' within the mail interface.
I've marked all the emails suspected by Shaw as not spam. These email addresses are also in my webmail contact list, including my lawyer and mortgage broker as well as my spouse yet their emailed keep going to spam.
This just started a few weeks ago
Cant have this happening with real estate transactions going on
What did shaw do to make these emails change to suspected spam all of a sudden in the past few weeks?
Ps I only use webmail so marking it not spam doesnt work 100%
@barai -- I only use WebMail, so marking it not spam doesn't work 100%
It does for me -- it moves the message from the "junk" folder to the "inbox" folder.
What did you expect it to do?
I'm gonna have to give the solutions provided in the responses here a try because I'm getting the same thing. One particular email I've been getting forever now is marked as spam. I can see it because I keep them in my inbox but it's still a pain, very easy to miss
@rahmmie -- does that "one particular E-mail" always come from the same E-mail ID? Have you configured Shaw WebMail in any way, to reference that E-mail ID?
Hiya, thanks for getting back to me (@mdk)
I have not made any changes whatsoever in my email (my settings or anything like that). In fact, I haven't used it any different from how I've always used it. However several emails from ABCDEF.com get through without a problem and in fact do so through different emails since I have two accounts to separate the subscriptions.
However, there are some emails from that same ABCDEF.com that previously got through without a problem now being marked with the "Shaw thinks this mail is junk mail"
You can imagine how confusing it can become when one can't even trust Shaw's own suggestions for their "junk" filter and instead maybe there is another option to turn it off completely and handle that part of the mail process (the classifications of emails) by the mail application instead (like I already do) without Shaw putting in their dirty fingers over it just to mess it up. Basically, let everything get through and then let the mail application use their own junk filters to see if their AI is better programmed
I was going to write a special rule for that email, then I figured "why should I be the one fixing THEIR problem?"
Oh, and btw, the emails I'm talking about are from The Washington Post (washingtonpost.com). I can have 3 to 5 every day distributed over 2 email addresses, and then there will always be one saying Shaw thought that one was "suspect and maybe junk mail"
Yes. It should. It doesn't.
I'm having the same issue I have previously. [And have had a number of times since my original complaint.] It's unacceptable.
Can replies still be made to this discussion?