![]() ![]() Outbound spam evaluation is a proactive measure to prevent blacklisting and keep your email server up and running. I’d like to add my vote that the implementation of IMH’s Spam filters are obscene. For example, we develop content related to personal finance such as loans, refinancing, and etc. I’ve re-written an email 10 times trying to get it to go through without any luck. Sending from an address that isn’t from a certain domain (which we have hosted here) isn’t an option. I get that payday loans, refinancing, and etc are trigger words, but does IMH not take into account frequency? If IMH insists on having such stringent SPAM filters in place, flagged by keywords, there really needs to be some fine-tuning put in place or else we will, unfortunately, be forced to move hosting providers. If 1 out of 50 has trigger words, don’t you think it most-likely is of natural and benign origin? If 1000 emails in a row have trigger words, then obviously something is up. If you’re going to inconvenience every single customer, you should do so very carefully-or you may find you have much fewer customers to level complaints towards you. This is a common issue with many spam prevention services. If you are trying to forward an email that has been identified as spam to a spam prevention service, but the spam filter recognizes it as spam and prevents it. The easiest thing to do is save the email as a text message and then compress it as a ZIP file and send it. ![]() You can do this from within the cPanel File Manager. Go into cPanel File Manager and then upload the file into your account. Find the email and then use the COMPRESS option in the file manager so that your email text won’t be filtered by the spam filter. Attach the compressed file to your email and should be good to go. If you still need help, then please let us know. ![]()
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