An email newsletter about sales from an external company is sometimes blocked by spamBlocker. What option could you choose to make sure the newsletter is delivered to your users? (Select one.)
An email newsletter about sales from an external company is sometimes blocked by spamBlocker. What option could you choose to make sure the newsletter is delivered to your users? (Select one.)
To ensure that an email newsletter from an external company is delivered to your users, you should add a spamBlocker exception based on the 'From' field of the newsletter email. This directs the spamBlocker to recognize emails from that specific sender as legitimate and not to block them. Other options, like tagging the email subject or setting quarantine actions, don't directly ensure delivery to users' inboxes.
The correct awnser is A.
My opinion is that the correct answer is A.
I agreed with solution Answer is C. Question ask how to make sure my user'll get newsletters. If we choose A. What's going on if company change sender email or if new company send newsletters to users. If we trust spamblocker can classify type of email C. is good choice so we added tag for user can make filter rules for separate newsletters email.
C is more likely to cause more spam to come through and how often do companies change the email address they send newsletters from? On balance, I'd say A is the better answer.
I believe that the correct answer is A - this is how I have always achieved this on a WatchGuard
Right answer is A, if it would be C the spam blocker allow all massive campaign
Ahh, clever. The question states it is "Sometimes blocked" and what can you do "to make sure" it is delivered? Assume that the sender's server changes where it sends from... if you create the exception based on "From" and it changes (a variable not confirmed), then that won't "ensure they receive it", the tagging would deliver all, regardless of where it's from.
A is correct for me
A is the correct answer.
You need to exclude From address
Seems to be C - from available actions: "For the SMTP-proxy, you can configure the Firebox to take the following actions when spamBlocker determines that an email message is spam: Deny — Stops the spam email message from being delivered to the email server, and sends SMTP error 571 Delivery not authorized, message refused to the email server that sent the email message. Add subject tag — Allows the spam email message to go to the mail server but adds text to the subject line to identify the email message as spam or possible spam. Allow — Allows the spam email message to go through the Firebox without a subject tag. Drop — Drops the connection immediately. Unlike the Deny action, the Firebox does not send an SMTP error message to the server that sent the email. If the Firebox does not send an error, the server that sent the email will detect this as a timeout and will likely try to resend the message at least once. Quarantine — Sends the spam email message to a Quarantine Server. If you use spamBlocker with the POP3 or IMAP-proxy, you have only two actions to choose from: Add Subject Tag and Allow. You cannot use the Quarantine Server with the POP3 or IMAP-proxy."
Should be A
The correct answer should be "A".
I think it should be A to "make sure the newsletter is delivered to your users" C would then be added to let users know it is a mass mailing. There is a reason SpamBlocker is blocking in the first place. Still very vague question.
For Bulk mail or graymail you can use the tag Bulk mail and send it for the users.
Agreed, answer should be C in my opinion. Adding an exception would only block a single user domain. The question is not clear on whether it is the same company, but we would assume that the email newsletter could be from different addresses. Then again, the key word here is "the newsletter" singular, so it is somewhat of a trick question.