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by nulld3v
903 days ago
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I have multiple Gmail accounts (like 5+ lol) as well as my own Google Workspace account (for unlimited GDrive) so for deliverability to Gmail testing I just used that. I had a couple Hotmail/Microsoft Live/Outlook accounts too. But deliverability for me was always quite consistent. If it went to spam on one account, it would go to spam on all of them. At this point I no longer do deliverability testing because I simply don't see the need to. No one has ever complained about my emails going to spam so the thought has never really crossed my mind. I've also had a lot of trouble creating Outlook accounts for some reason. New accounts seem to get suspended real quick. My previous Outlook accounts have mostly all been suspended too. Not sure what's going on there... EDIT: From the output of `dig` I can see my landlord uses Outlook. I just emailed him a couple days ago and he replied so I guess all is well? |
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You mentioned that your emails on Gmail and Outlook initially went to spam, but that you clicked "not spam" on those emails. This action should prevent your emails being flagged as spam for that particular receiver who clicked not spam. Obviously it can't work such that one person clicks "not spam" on an email, and then everything from that sender is whitelisted for everybody. Because then the spammers could just register a single email account, click "not spam" once, and then spam everybody. So my point is, if you test deliverability on email accounts where you have already whitelisted the sender, of course it's going to look like email is delivered.
> I just emailed him a couple days ago and he replied so I guess all is well?
Presumably you and your landlord have already emailed each other in the past, so any anti spam system should allow emails between those addresses to reach their destinations. It doesn't really prove anything.