Opera Mail Spam Filter off but still moves mail to Spam folder
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burnout426 Volunteer last edited by burnout426
Yes, right-click on All Messages/Spam in the mail panel and goto "properties". In addition to turning off the internal filter, you need to uncheck "learn from labeled messages" on the options tab. When you uncheck that option, in addition to turning it off, it should delete the learned rules (that are stored in the autofilter folder in the mail folder (see "Menu -> Help -> About Opera Mail" for the location)).
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A Former User last edited by
@burnout426 Hi, the internal filter is already turned off and "learn from labeled messages" also unchecked and the autofilter rules file I had already deleted yesterday.
However it still continues to move same set of emails into Spam. I've just opened Opera Mail this morning since last night and it has just moved emails again while it was checking for mail...
Not sure where else I can check but as all of the above has been set correctly, I may have to reinstall OM.
Is there a way I can back up my accounts easily so I don't have to reenter all my accounts settings after reinstall?
Thanks
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burnout426 Volunteer last edited by burnout426
@viewfinder said in Opera Mail Spam Filter off but still moves mail to Spam folder:
Is there a way I can back up my accounts easily so I don't have to reenter all my accounts settings after reinstall?
While Opera is closed. you can try to backup accounts.ini in the "mail" folder. Then, delete/rename the "mail" folder, start Opera so it creates a new mail folder and then close Opera. Then, replace accounts.ini with your old one. Then, start Opera. If that works, you still might have to retype your usernames and passwords But, doing things that way was never supported.
It's better to delete both the roaming and local Opera Mail profile folders and start fresh. But, this time, don't enter any usernames and passwords when setting up your accounts. Instead, after they're created, go into each IMAP account's properties and choose to disable the spam filter for the accounts. Also, disable the internal filter and "learn from labeled messages" for "All Messages/Spam". Once you have all that done, go into each account's properties and enter the username and password for the incoming and outgoing servers. That way, Opera's Spam filter never has a chance to learn anything etc.
If you still have the same issue, it's something with the server's spam handling. Either that or some spam IMAP keywords/flags that Opera set on the messages are still on there. You should be able to check the log to see if that's the case. If so, there might be some tricks to get those flags/keywords off of the problem messages.
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A Former User last edited by
@burnout426 Thanks for the info, I will try that now and update back here the outcomes.
I'll try the quick method first and test for a bit and if that still doesn't solve it, I'll then do a full uninstall / reinstall and configure it from a clean state.
I do disable local spam filter for each account individually so that it's all server-side. The emails moved by OM don't appear in the Junk folder in Webmail so it doesn't appear to be mirroring anything server-side but as you suggest, it could be a local keyword / flag.
Fingers crossed!
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A Former User last edited by
OM still moving emails into Spam folder... I did enable logging and do see many FETCH entries:
- 150 FETCH (FLAGS (\Answered \Seen $NotJunk) UID 175573)
- 151 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen $NotJunk) UID 175574)
- 152 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen $NotJunk) UID 175575)
- 153 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen $NotJunk) UID 175576)
- 154 FETCH (FLAGS (\Answered \Seen $NotJunk) UID 175577)
- 155 FETCH (FLAGS (\Answered \Seen $NotJunk) UID 175578)
- 156 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen $NotJunk) UID 175579)
- 157 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen $NotJunk) UID 175580)
- 158 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen $NotJunk) UID 175581)
- 159 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen $NotJunk) UID 175582)
- 160 FETCH (FLAGS (\Seen $NotJunk) UID 175583)
I'm still having to Select All and Mark as not spam each time.
Will proceed to reinstall and try again cleanly...
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A Former User last edited by
Sadly still the same after reinstall. Will POP download those emails OM thinks are spam so they're no longer there. Hopefully once they're out the way it should be fine from this point on.
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A Former User last edited by
Just to update. I've downloaded the specific emails to a separate POP3 client and deleted from server. Opera Mail is behaving itself so far and looks OK. Not sure what was unique about those emails but now that they're deleted, Spam folder is remaining empty...
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burnout426 Volunteer last edited by
@viewfinder said in Opera Mail Spam Filter off but still moves mail to Spam folder:
Just to update. I've downloaded the specific emails to a separate POP3 client and deleted from server. Opera Mail is behaving itself so far and looks OK
Awesome!
@viewfinder said in Opera Mail Spam Filter off but still moves mail to Spam folder:
Not sure what was unique about those emails
Yeah, not sure. Was most likely an issue with a flag/keyword.
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A Former User last edited by
@burnout426 Thanks for your help and advice, much appreciated. Out of curiosity, do you know of any tips on troubleshooting flags and keywords or is it a complex task? Normally I like to troubleshoot and find the cause and fix rather than workaround them.
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burnout426 Volunteer last edited by burnout426
See https://stackoverflow.com/questions/14959461/how-to-talk-to-imap-server-in-shell-via-openssl and learn a few of the IMAP commands that allow you to select a folder and view/add/remove flags/keywords for a certain message. Then, if there's ever a problem, you can manually fix the problem messages. You can get openssl binaries from https://slproweb.com/products/Win32OpenSSL.html for example.
Takes a little while to learn some of the stuff. You can also do it with Telnet, but if you make a type for a command, you can backspace to fix it and will have to retype the command all over again. But, Telnet is already installed, so you might find that easier.
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A Former User last edited by
@burnout426 That's brilliant! Thanks, will certainly have a look and try that if any problem emails ever move to spam again. Something different and new to learn!