USPS is only in the United States, and if the email came from an email address such as: Maybe your email provider can have smart artificial intelligence system which looks at the link of where the email was sent from. That's just one idea that could be implemented for a way to avoid having spam emails being sent to you.Īnother idea is like in my USPS example above: Let's say it matches one of the saved default spam emails in the email provider's system, then they would automatically delete it, without having it being sent to you.īut the downside is that there's the very slim possibility that it could actually be a real email with whoever that sent it out made that small grammatical typo. In the English language, there shouldn't be a space in between. The error here is that there's a space after the word "emails" and before the "comma". I'm guessing one possible way is that if your email provider implements a way to have an automatic detection system that looks at an email "character-by-character" identification to match an exact default spam email they have saved in their system that if this spam email is typed in a way exactly like the saved default spam email, then it would automatically delete it.įor example: Suppose that the spam email has a sentence "If you no longer want to receive emails, then reply back." Maybe in the future, there could be a way to stop them. Maybe MS will figure out a way to stop them.As of right now (May 2022), it is pretty much impossible to figuring out a way to stop these spam emails (because of VPNs and fake sites that scammers can change on a daily basis to avoid web browsers from detecting if the sites are real or fake). There should be no space: " ID: "Ĥ) Probably more errors too, but I'm tired of typing haha, sorry. In that sentence, that needs to be one word: "into"ģ) There's a space after "ID" and then the "colon". Every first letter of every word capitalized? That sounds okay with me. Oh wow! So many errors already in the subject of the email.ġ) Why did the "t" in "to", "y" in "your", and "a" in "account" all become capitalized all of a sudden? If the first letter of every word is capitalized (which isn't), then okay. "Someone tried to log in To Your Account, User ID : pepanee" I deleted my Junk emails lately, and only saw 5 new ones. I just checked my email to see if I can find a fake email from number 3 above. If it is a fake site, and I actually do click it, most of the time Google will open the link and say that the site you are accessing is unsafe, hence very most likely a fake scammer site looking for you to type in your credit card / bank information.ģ) And according to your specific example above, I have gotten the " Microsoft account unusual sign-in activity" in my email account as well. If it is some weird strange looking website ( then it is most likely a fake website. On the bottom of the web browser, it shows the website link. If there's an email in my Junk folder that I may think could be real: I place the mouse on top of a link inside the email, and look at the address. That's a huge pro.Ģ) (I use Google Chrome). Your post shows that you are very well at the English language. You noticed "Wndows" (without the letter "i") instead of "Windows". So keep a keen eye out for typos and grammatical errors (for example: Sentences that don't make sense and/or an uncapitalized first letter in the first word of a sentence). Scammers use incorrect spelling & incorrect grammar. I check the Junk folder to make sure no important emails end up in there. Most emails that are scams end up in the Junk folder. One thing that I have learned over time with emails, is:ġ) (I have a Hotmail email account). Hence, there's nothing Microsoft can do about these fake emails. Most of scammers/spammers use a fake email address (and sometimes use a valid-looking email address) & VPN IP number to send their emails out.
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