![]() I do not want to work and figure this out. I have to read and understand your built-in blocklist rules to see if I would want to uncheck them. What you are suggesting (“This would include SpamSieve’s built-in blocklist rules (which you could uncheck to disable if you don’t want them)”) is work on my part. I don’t think you are understanding what I’m saying (and I think others), so I will try one last time and won’t respond again. This would include SpamSieve’s built-in blocklist rules (which you could uncheck to disable if you don’t want them) and the sender names and addresses of messages that you’ve trained as spam. Only messages that match the blocklist are considered blue. ![]() Please consider adding this capability with a much easier way to implement it. I have seen several forum threads essentially asking for this same thing. With Apple Mail junk mail, I have it set to delete (not trash) in 1 day. I want the trash to be clean with just valid messages that are ready for deletion (in 30 days in my case). And it should NOT be moved to the trash, rather auto-deleted. Then I’ll never see another message from that sender. I want a simple button to click like I had in Outlook. I had set up long auto-delete rules in Apple Mail which worked wonderfully, but adding each new blocked email address was very tedious. Just let me mark specific senders as blocked IN ADDITION to having all other mail filtered just as SpamSieve does.įrankly Apple Mail was catching >99% of all spam but I still had to review it to make sure nothing got through, and that’s no different than with SpamSieve. I am looking for that feature again via the click of a button or keyboard shortcut. ![]() Before I retired I used Outlook in a corporate environment (as a software engineer in a major corp) and I had automatic spam filtering PLUS the ability to mark any individual sender as blocked such that a blocked email address never made it to any folder, not inbox, spam, trash…nothing. I am a brand new trial user of SpamSieve, and this nuke option (true blocklist/blacklist) is precisely what I was looking for in SpamSieve (or any product that could work with Apple Mail). ![]() Aside from the visual/actual links, you can do these things today with ( ) and blocklist rules. ![]()
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