Keep your Email address and Use Gmail as your spam filter
I received an email from Email Essentials that provided information on how to use GMail as a spam filter that delivers filtering and still allows you to see what has been filtered before deletion. Many spam filters are either hidden from view or not configurable leaving you with the inability to get messages you expect to get.
Well, Google comes to the rescue, and best of all it's FREE. Google provides a Gmail facility that has a good spam filter which catches most unwanted messages. On the rare occasion Gmail does mistakenly tag a message as spam you can retrieve it easily from the Spam folder - it doesn't disappear never to be seen again.
You can still receive your email normally and keep your current email address. Use Gmail as an email filter via one of the following avenues provided. Which one you use depends on your circumstances and preferences.
Send email to Gmail - The simplest option is to re-direct your current email to a Gmail address. If your current address has a forwarding option you can use that to forward all messages your Gmail address.
Many ISP's don't allow that so Gmail has a method of ‘pulling' messages from an outside email account into Gmail. Go to Gmail settings | Accounts | Get mail from other accounts. This is Gmail's 'Mail Fetcher'. You can add five external accounts to bring into Gmail.
There are several options available:
- Leave copy on server. You can move messages from the external account to Gmail (unchecked) or copy messages so they can be accessed in both the old email account and in your Gmail account.
- Use secure connection. Some ISP's require a secure connection.
- Label incoming messages. ‘Labels' in Gmail are a bit like ‘Categories' in Outlook - all the messages from a particular source can be tagged accordingly.
- Archive incoming messages. If you just want a backup of messages held elsewhere, this option will put imported messages directly into the Gmail Archive folder.
Forwarding - Now you have messages flowing into Gmail and being spam filtered, how do you get to the remaining (presumably wanted) messages?
You could use Gmail as your primary mail host and that's the most straight-forward approach. Enable POP access from Settings | Forwarding and POP | POP Download then setup your email client accordingly. Gmail's help has instructions for many common email programs. There is an option to ensure that replies appear to come from an email address of your choice, not the gmail.com address.
But you may prefer to have your main mailbox held elsewhere, for example on a local ISP. That's where the Settings | Forwarding and POP | Forwarding option comes in. Just setup Gmail to forward all messages (after spam filtering) to an address you specify while keeping a copy in Gmail's storage. You can then grab your filtered email from the account you forward your Gmail address to.
Of course, you need to forward messages to a different account than any of the ones you're importing into Gmail. Otherwise you'd get a loop with messages coming into Gmail being forwarded to an account which then sends them back to Gmail.
Gmail spam control - Either way the messages are spam filtered for you by Google. If a spam message appears in your Inbox just click on the ‘Report Spam' button and it'll disappear with the details added to Gmail's spam tracking. If there's a message you want that got into your Spam folder just click on ‘Not Spam' and it'll be returned to your Inbox and Gmail notified once again.
There's no individually configurable ‘white-list' or ‘black-list' nor does Gmail have configurable levels of filtering but the standard filtering has worked very well in all our tests.
Centralized Email - Using Gmail in this way not only gives you free spam filtering but also lets you centralize your email in one place that's accessible from any Internet connected terminal. Instead of checking different mailboxes, all your messages are in one place. The Labels option lets you separate messages into folders for different parts of your life.
Additional email storage - If you setup Gmail to retain messages as well as forward them, you have an automatic backup of all your messages up to 2.8GB in total capacity, which should be enough for several years. If you accidentally delete a message, Gmail will have a copy.
As well as a backup, it means you can easily access your messages via Internet terminal or mobile phone. Gmail is easily searched online or indexed offline using Google Desktop Search.
Sound interesting? Check it out!
David L. Britt
Olathe, Kansas
http://www.davidlbritt.com/
http://www.heritage.net
http://heritagerealestateteam.com

Guiding You HOME!
Free is good, but I switched to the CA Internet Security Suite (http://shop.ca.com/) last year after trying the Anti-Virus and Anti-Spam free trials. I would rather eliminate the extra routing of emails and have complete control of how and what is considered spam.
Emails that are quarantined for your review will display a small window with the content of the email for you to review and Approve (White List) if it is not Spam.