Google, What Has Happened To Your Spam Filters?
A casual glance at my spam folder today shows nearly 850 bulk messages sitting there. Thanks, Gmail, for catching those and preventing them from reaching my in-box. Now, about the spam e-mails that <i>have</i> been reaching my in-box, such as the one I received this morning that is written in German, what gives? Oh, and the Nigerians have found me again.
A casual glance at my spam folder today shows nearly 850 bulk messages sitting there. Thanks, Gmail, for catching those and preventing them from reaching my in-box. Now, about the spam e-mails that have been reaching my in-box, such as the one I received this morning that is written in German, what gives? Oh, and the Nigerians have found me again.Spam still continues to be a worldwide problem. I first signed up with Gmail years ago specifically for its spam filters (OK, the 1 GB of storage was an enticement at the time, too). Spam just ticks me off.
For years, I was pleased that Gmail's spam filters kept bulk messages out of my in-box. My Hotmail and Yahoo mail accounts did not provide such good protection from the scheming hordes. I routinely had to delete dozens, if not hundreds, of junk mail messages from my in-box each week. No so with Gmail. Until recently, that is.
About a year ago, I noticed that spam e-mails were occasionally sneaking past Google's filters. Maybe one a day, or so. Last fall, that swelled to about 10 per day. This spring, it's slowly been creeping up and up and up. I am concerned about the stuff that appears to befuddle Gmail's filters.
I've been receiving more and more e-mail from foreign countries that arrive in that foreign language. Today's e-mail from Germany isn't unique. E-mails that arrive in other languages are puzzling. German, Russian, Chinese, etc., aren't uncommon to see in my in-box anymore. Shouldn't e-mails from any language other than the one a user uses be automatically filtered out?
What's more disturbing is that the Nigerians have found me again. As have the purveyors of bedroom-enhancing products. These types of e-mails are so old that I am surprised any e-mail with the words "prince," "jewel," "mine," "inherited," and unprintable others are even allowed to transit the Internet.
I am just curious, Google, to know what's up.
(As an aside, perhaps the funniest thing I've seen Gmail do is send press releases from Google to my spam filter. Oh, how I laughed...)
About the Author
You May Also Like
Radical Automation of ITSM
September 19, 2024Unleash the power of the browser to secure any device in minutes
September 24, 2024Maximizing Manufacturing Efficiency with Real-Time Production Monitoring
September 25, 2024