Αναζήτηση στην υποστήριξη

Προσοχή στις απάτες! Δεν θα σας ζητήσουμε ποτέ να καλέσετε ή να στείλετε μήνυμα σε κάποιον αριθμό τηλεφώνου ή να μοιραστείτε προσωπικά δεδομένα. Αναφέρετε τυχόν ύποπτη δραστηριότητα μέσω της επιλογής «Αναφορά κατάχρησης».

Learn More

I made a bad filter and now all email have been moved to spam, can i delete the filter without starting thunderbird?

  • 1 απάντηση
  • 2 έχουν αυτό το πρόβλημα
  • 8 προβολές
  • Τελευταία απάντηση από Zenos

more options

Lots of spam coming from addresses other than .com and .net so I tried to filter by From, does not contain .com and .net. FAIL. Now all emails have been moved to Spam. Is there a way to undo, and is there a way to delete the filter or all filter without starting Thunderbird?

Lots of spam coming from addresses other than .com and .net so I tried to filter by From, does not contain .com and .net. FAIL. Now all emails have been moved to Spam. Is there a way to undo, and is there a way to delete the filter or all filter without starting Thunderbird?

Επιλεγμένη λύση

"Does not contain .com" and "does not contain .net" could be a tricky filter to set up. Are you familiar with De Morgan's Laws?

I'd have used "ends with", not "contains".

So, if it ends with .net or ends with .com, it's OK?

(from, ends with, .net) OR (from, ends with, .com) = NOT spam

OR means "Match any" in the way Thunderbird's filters do it.

So it's quite easy to set up two rules (in one filter) to identify good messages. But how to identify bad messages?

Negate both sides:

NOT ( .net OR .com) = spam

Apply De Morgan's rule:

(NOT .net) AND (NOT .com) = spam

so, Match All rule #1: From, doesn't end with, .net rule #2: From, doesn't end with, .com

Action mark and treat as spam

But you can't do that. There is no "doesn't end with" option. You could try with "contains" or more accurately, "doesn't contain" but I'm not at all sure it will recognize the dot character, and looking for occurrences of "net" or "com" is just too imprecise.

My solution would be the FiltaQuilla add-on and its regular expression capability. That would give me the ability to set up:

Match All rule #1: From (regex), doesn't match, /\.net$/i rule #2: From (regex), doesn't match, /\.com$/i

Action mark and treat as spam

This is not an approach that would work for me. I don't see any obvious correlation in my incoming email messages between the TLD in the email address and its spamminess.

Have you tried running Thunderbird offline to avoid your filters doing any more damage?

If you're feeling brave, you could edit the msgFilterRules.dat file in the relevant account in your profile. You should be able to find the lines containing your duff filter and delete them. You should be able to edit this file in Notepad.

Ανάγνωση απάντησης σε πλαίσιο 👍 1

Όλες οι απαντήσεις (1)

more options

Επιλεγμένη λύση

"Does not contain .com" and "does not contain .net" could be a tricky filter to set up. Are you familiar with De Morgan's Laws?

I'd have used "ends with", not "contains".

So, if it ends with .net or ends with .com, it's OK?

(from, ends with, .net) OR (from, ends with, .com) = NOT spam

OR means "Match any" in the way Thunderbird's filters do it.

So it's quite easy to set up two rules (in one filter) to identify good messages. But how to identify bad messages?

Negate both sides:

NOT ( .net OR .com) = spam

Apply De Morgan's rule:

(NOT .net) AND (NOT .com) = spam

so, Match All rule #1: From, doesn't end with, .net rule #2: From, doesn't end with, .com

Action mark and treat as spam

But you can't do that. There is no "doesn't end with" option. You could try with "contains" or more accurately, "doesn't contain" but I'm not at all sure it will recognize the dot character, and looking for occurrences of "net" or "com" is just too imprecise.

My solution would be the FiltaQuilla add-on and its regular expression capability. That would give me the ability to set up:

Match All rule #1: From (regex), doesn't match, /\.net$/i rule #2: From (regex), doesn't match, /\.com$/i

Action mark and treat as spam

This is not an approach that would work for me. I don't see any obvious correlation in my incoming email messages between the TLD in the email address and its spamminess.

Have you tried running Thunderbird offline to avoid your filters doing any more damage?

If you're feeling brave, you could edit the msgFilterRules.dat file in the relevant account in your profile. You should be able to find the lines containing your duff filter and delete them. You should be able to edit this file in Notepad.