5 Dec
2006
5 Dec
'06
10:54 a.m.
On 12/5/06, William Allen Simpson <william.allen.simpson@gmail.com> wrote:
The "study" says that "nearly 20 percent of email does not get delivered to the inbox as intended, largely because it gets mistaken as spam."
That's utter hogwash. My Mail Mailguard statistics this year show that for me personally, only 0.1% of messages are false positives! Systemwide, it's only 0.6%!
Depends on - 1. How large your network is (how many millions of mailboxes) 2. How you define spam [that study probably defines anything that's can-spam compliant as non-spam? haven't checked]