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THIS WEEK'S POWERTIP
Junk your spam in Outlook 2003
By Diane Poremsky

This week, we introduce you to a much improved feature in Outlook 2003: junk email handling. Junk email removes spam from your mailbox using built-in filtering capabilities. The junk mail features is highly accurate when set on High and you can add specific addresses or domains to the Safe Senders, Safe Recipients, and Blocked Senders lists. To view the options, open Tools, Options, Junk Email settings.

Since the official release of Office 2003, we're seeing a lot of queries in the Microsoft newsgroups (at news://msnews.microsoft.com) where people are creating rules to delete spam and adding hundreds, if not thousands, of domains to the Blocked senders list. It's an awful lot of work to create rules that do what Outlook 2003's junk filter already does very well.

Best practices for Outlook's Junk email filter includes setting it on High and moving mail to the Junk Email folder. Disable the option to "Trust mail from my Contacts" on the Safe Senders tab-if you have a contact for yourself any spam sent with your address in the from field will be trusted. If mailing lists are caught by the junk filter, add their address to the Safe Recipients list. You shouldn't need too many addresses on the Blocked Senders lists and won't need to import a huge list immediately. My blocked sender list contains one address-the address of a person who likes to forward me a lot of junk.

Every few days, take a few moments to scan the junk mail folder for false positives-something you can do while waiting on hold. Once scanned, right click on it and choose Empty Junk Email. After you add newsletter addresses to the Safe senders list, you'll find few false positives, but I'm still uncomfortable setting it to delete messages immediately.

Diane Poremsky is the president of CDOLive LLC and a Microsoft Outlook MVP. She's author of Teach Yourself Outlook 2003 in 24 Hours (Sam's, 2003) and coauthor of OneNote 2003 for Windows (Visual QuickStart Guide). For questions or suggestions for future columns, write her at outlook@cdolive.com.


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The Power Magazine for Microsoft Outlook and Exchange Users at OutlookPower.com
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