Opening a given e-mail message marked as spam now gets you an explanation of why Gmail considers it junk.
Wondering why a certain e-mail was dumped into your Gmail spam folder? Google will now clue you in.
As of yesterday, Gmail users can select any message banished to the spam folder and see a "Why is this message in Spam?" notice near the top. The notice will display a brief explanation accompanied by a "Learn more" link to a page describing the many reasons certain messages are considered spam.
When a user look at the e-mail in his own Gmail spam folder revealed a variety of explanations.
For one e-mail that claimed to be from YouTube but clearly was not, Gmail said that "our systems couldn't verify that this message was really sent by youtube.com." Another e-mail hawking phony Adobe software was flagged as spam because "many people marked similar messages as phishing scams, so this might contain unsafe content."
A third e-mail that looked like it was sent from Twitter was considered junk because "similar messages were used to steal people's personal information." And a batch of other messages were flagged mainly because they were "similar to messages that were detected by our spam filters."
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