Thunderbird treats Facebook posting notifications as scams
I have Facebook set up to notify me when new posts are made to a thread where I've commented. For some reason, TBird treats these as scams and warns me every time I follow the link to the comments.
I can still get there, but it's annoying. I'd like an option in "filters" to mark a message as "not spam". Or something. Turning spam detection off is too radical a solution -- I do like _some_ help in avoiding phishing emails although I generally check URLs before clicking through. (More for fear of malware than because of phishing, but I still want to be careful.)
Kiválasztott megoldás
Apparently the scam notification does not work too well anyway. You can turn that off in Options > Security > Email Scams.
Válasz olvasása eredeti szövegkörnyezetben 👍 2Összes válasz (6)
Spam: If you are seeing the word 'Spam', then this is being set by either the server or some other program you are running eg: spamassassin. Thunderbird does not use the word 'Spam', it uses the word 'Junk'.
Scam: Regarding 'This message may be a scam' alert, please read info here:
No, it is not being marked "Spam".
But I am seeing a yellow bar at the top of the message body, with the words "This message may be a scam." and a button "Ignore Warning".
The yellow bar also includes a red shield with a gray border and a white exclamation point in the center of the shield.
Here, educate yourself.
https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/thunderbirds-scam-detection
You've answered why it happens. But I can't change the way Facebook generates messages, so I'm asking for an enhancement to TBird that allows me to say, "this message is not a scam, and I want similar messages not marked as possible scam."
What does "similar" mean? Messages where the second level domain (e.g. xxx.com) in both the linked-URL and the displayed URL are the same as in this message.
Also the case where the text of the link is _not_ a URL and does not resemble a URL (e.g., "commented on (user name)'s post in (name of group)" ) and the linked-URL's second-level domain is the same as in this message.
That would let me teach Thunderbird to not mark Facebook's messages as scams.
Kiválasztott megoldás
Apparently the scam notification does not work too well anyway. You can turn that off in Options > Security > Email Scams.
I guess I'll call that "solved". However, clicking "solved the problem" got an error, so i can't formally mark it that way.