How Does the E-mail System Determine Spam?
- Website Information
- Website Editor
- FAQ
- Free Trial Website
- Additional Services
- Technical Information
- Going Live
- Getting Started
- Online Print Center
- W4P 3.0
- Printer@Work
- Policies and Procedures
- Administrative
- uDesignIT!
- Instant Pricing
- Harmony
- Training
- Orders and Jobs
- Products, Forms, and People
- Email Newsletter
- Release Notes
- DesignEdit
- Odyssey
- Resources
- Websites for Printers
The Spam Problem
We estimate that 85% of all email traffic on the Internet is spam. Spam is the most complex problem facing the Internet today. The problem has already led to millions of dollars in lost productivity and additional infrastructure costs for businesses and service providers.
Spammers are growing wiser on a daily basis, learning new methods to manipulate common spam defenses and obtaining more sophisticated software to trick spam filters and penetrate email inboxes.
Solving the Problem
In order to win the war against spam, businesses must evolve their spam defenses faster than spammers evolve their techniques.
Our Spam DNA Filtering® system accomplishes this by gathering real-time spam intelligence from a number of sources and then actively using this intelligence to block the spam. We track tens of thousands of live spam email characteristics ("DNA"), which alone identify the majority of spam. In addition, a number of third-party spam databases, several DNS checks, and several message-formatting tests are used when analyzing each email.
We aggregate all of this data into a collection of several thousand constantly evolving spam tests that are
performed on every email that enters the email hosting system. The results of these tests are combined together
to identify more than 98% of spam with virtually zero false-positives.
Weighted Tests
There are two important factors to consider when dealing with spam:
- No single test can identify all spam.
- Some tests will falsely identify legitimate email as spam.
- Did the mail server falsely identify itself in the "HELO/EHLO" data?
- Does the mail server have a missing or invalid reverse DNS record?
- Is the domain missing "A" and "MX" DNS records or using illegitimate values?
- Was there an SPF violation? (Was the email sent from a mail server that is not authorized to send mail using the sender's domain name?)
- Are message headers improperly formatted or missing required data?
- Delete the email. In this case, users will never see the spam.
- Deliver to Spam folder. This will allow each user to review the emails that have been tagged as spam. This folder can be viewed from webmail or IMAP, and settings are available to automatically purge old spam from this folder after a certain number of days or number of emails
- Tag the subject. The word "[SPAM]" will be added to the beginning of the subject line, and then delivered normally. This allows each user to set up custom filtering rules inside of desktop mail programs, such as Microsoft Outlook.
- Deliver to an alternate email address. This is useful if a company wants to have a single administrator review all of the spam that their users receive.