yes it goes in the recivers spam
No
well, i don't know of a way to block emails from peopleyou do not know, but some advice from me is: just delete them if it is not from your contacts list... just put them in the trash and then maybe even permanently delete the email/s... if somebody you don't know is constantly sending you emails, definitely tell somebody about it and maybe read one or two just to see what they are saying...
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If you don't get told, you won't know. If you keep sending emails and they don't send them back, then they're either idle, have gone out, ignoring you or blocked you.
if you try to call the person then it will tell you that that general person has blocked your number
Hi, you can use the professional email sender - Auto Mail Sender to schedule your emails. Please visit Auto Mail Sender's official site at http://www.AutoMailSender.com to know more detail.
There are many ways to stop spam email. The first is not to open them as some contain HTML codes to let the sender know that the emailaccount is active, this can then generate more spam. Secondly, some spam emails contain a link to unsubscribe, never click on this as once again this lets the sender know that the account is active. Thirdly, most email providers allow users to mark spam email as 'spam', this helps them to prevent 'spammers' from continuing to send spam emails by bouncing the emails back to them. Finally, there is software available such as Cactus Spam Blocker which can be downloaded for free and helps to reduce spam.
I do not know this . I need the answer.AnswerThese emails are a SCAM to get your money. He is NOT with the FBI and his emails have been reported to the FBI. Please do not respond to any of his emails. There are a few other names showing up in these emails that state they are with the FBI and they are also scams.
If the sender is any good, they are going to know (traceroute or tcptraceroute will tell them).For forwarded traffic:iptables -I FORWARD -s 10.14.34.207 -j DROPFor traffic that you receive, the best thing to do is to pretend that the port is closed:iptables -I INPUT -s 10.14.34.207 -j REJECT
The safest way to send and check emails is to first know what is spam, and how to prevent fraudulent emails from coming into your email inbox. Some scams are when you are greeted by an advertisement on products, such as Victoria's Secret lingerie, or some Gap clothes. Don't click links like these, or any links you receive from an unknown sender, because it probably is a fraudulent website.
No, he does not. In most cases, your email service is going to ignore or delete the emails you block. If your email service rejects the email in a heavier way, the sender might get an error message, but that's not very likely to happen.**Not necessarily true. Some ISP's, such as AOL have integrated a voluntary notification system into their email service, though it only works with email from OTHER MEMBERS.Some spam filters (some free, some not) offer this capability as an option, but depending on the filter, it can be confusing to configure. Perhaps the easiest way to notify the sender, then, is to use the free Windows Live email client, though you must have a POP/SMTP account (in other words, an email account you can access with desktop email applications such as Outlook Express, Mozilla Thunderbird, etc.). If you're uncertain about this, refer to the help section of your email service or contact your ISP.To set up sender notification in the Windows Live email client, use the menu bar at the top of the screen and select as follows: Actions->Junk Email->Safety Options...then select the Blocked Senders tab. At the bottom of the screen under the phrase "When I delete and block" is a check box next to the option "Bounce the blocked message back to the sender". Check this box.After that, any time you block a sender using the Windows Live email client (while highlighting email from the sender you'd like to block go to: Actions->Junk Email->Add sender to blocked senders list), the sender's email will be moved to the Junk email folder where you can delete it, thus bouncing the email back to the sender.No, Services like GMAIL, Windows live, yahoo and Facebook do not notify when someone blocked you.
It will be returned by the 'postmaster' as 'unable to deliver' - You will get a message in your in-box soon after you've sent the email telling you it '...could not be delivered to one or more recipients...' This sometimes happens if you've typed the address wrongly. However - if you KNOW you typed the correct address, then it means your email has been blocked by the recipient.
No. Spammers can put any name or email address in the "sender" field. They can programmatically enter your name or email address as the sender, or even Santa Claus. This does by no way mean that your computer was hacked or accessed by other people. The reason they do this is because it increases the likelihood that you will open the email and react to whatever they are advertising. People are more tempted to open spam emails when it comes from someone they know, or particulary when it seems to come from themselves. The only real way to know where the message came from, is to check the email header and to track down the IP address of the sender's computer.