B2C
What kind of mail do filters target?
All to often we think of filters as a linear scale. There’s blocking on one end, and there’s an inbox on the other. Every email falls somewhere on that line.Makes sense, right? Bad mail is blocked, good mail goes to the inbox. The bulk folder exists for mail that’s not bad enough to block, but isn’t good enough to go to the inbox.
Once we get to that model, we can think of filters as just different tolerances for what is bad and good. Using the same model, we can see aggressive filters block more mail and send more mail to bulk, while letting less into the inbox. There are also permissive filters that block very little mail and send most mail to the inbox.That’s a somewhat useful model, but it doesn’t really capture the full complexity of filters. There isn’t just good mail and bad mail. Mail isn’t simply solicited or unsolicited. Filters take into account any number of factors before deciding what to do with mail.
Can I assume consumer and business filtering is the same?
Today’s question comes from Steve B.
I wondered if you know much about hosted email providers such as google apps, Microsoft and yahoo.
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I have seen a rise in number of people using them to provide their corporate email service. I am using the same logic that the rules governing delivery to gmail will effect those using google hosted email for example. For Microsoft i have been using Hotmail due to the SmartScreen filters. Would you agree with that logic?