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How to Whitelist Truthout in Your Spam Filter

With the advent of outrageous volumes of unwanted email these days, it’s unfortunate that legitimate email publications are not being seen by some of the readers who enjoy those publications. There is much fear today that the email publishing / marketing industry is in serious trouble, due to mistakes in filtering when legitimate email is … Continued

With the advent of outrageous volumes of unwanted email these days, it’s unfortunate that legitimate email publications are not being seen by some of the readers who enjoy those publications. There is much fear today that the email publishing / marketing industry is in serious trouble, due to mistakes in filtering when legitimate email is erroneously tagged as unwanted email.

While we applaud the anti-spam industry for removing the plethora of unwanted email from many of our mailboxes, from time to time, some legitimate email publications are mistaken as unwanted.

Sometimes, this results in our mailings bouncing back, with requests for us to respond to challenge/response messages to prevent future filtering. However, due to the size of our list, it’s nearly impossible for us handle the volume of such requests.

To that end, please realize that we want our readers to always anticipate and enjoy the valuable information that our publication delivers.

If you currently use an anti-spam program or service, we ask that you take just a minute or two to add our publication to your “safe” or permitted email sender list. This usually involves simply adding our sending address (From:) to your whitelist, safelist, or list of priviledged senders. This is commonly known as whitelisting a publication.

Please refer to the following whitelisting instructions you can use to whitelist Truthout, depending on the filtering solution you use:

GMail and Google apps:

  1. Sign in to the Google Admin console.
  2. Click Google Apps > Gmail > Advanced settings.
  3. In the Organizations section, highlight your domain.
  4. In the Email whitelist section, enter the IP addresses of your contact’s domain host to make sure any mail originating from these IP addresses are not labeled spam. If you would like to add more than one IP address, enter an IP range in CIDR notation or separate each IP address with a comma.
  5. Click Save changes.

AOL

Go to keyword: Mail Controls. Select the screen name we’re sending your Truthout Newsletter to. Click Customize Mail Controls For This Screen Name.

Version 9.0:

Open your latest Truthout Newsletter e-mail. Click the Add Address button (on the right) to add to your “People I Know” list.

Alternatively, you can just send an e-mail to: [email protected], and that will add us to your “People I Know” list automatically. To do this:

Open your latest Truthout Newsletter e-mail. Click the Reply button (it’s in the top right corner). A new email window opens with the wrong address in the “Send To” box. Replace the address in the Send To box with: [email protected] Click Send Now (in the top right corner). Even if the e-mail you send doesn’t get through to us, the act of sending it does the job of putting us into your “People I Know” list.

CleanMyMailbox:

If Truthout is filtered, from the spambox, click on the white “W” icon on the left column of the mailing. When the pop-up window comes up, simply click the Add to Whitelist button.

Alternative whitelisting methods:

* Click on the White List button. Add: [email protected] to the bottom of your existing list. Click the Submit List button.

Cloudmark SpamNet:

Select Cloudmark | Options… from the Cloudmark SpamNet toolbar in Outlook. Click Advanced. Go to the Whitelist tab. Click the Add button. Type: [email protected] Click OK. Click OK. Click Yes. Click OK.

Earthlink:

Click on Address Book (it’s over on the left, below your Folders). When your Address Book opens, click the Add button. On the Add Contact screen, find the Internet Information box. Enter [email protected] into the top Email box. Click Save

Hotmail:

Click the Options link, on the main menu tabs, then Safe List. Type: [email protected] in your Safe List. If you see a message that should not be in your Junk Mail folder, click ‘This is not Junk Mail’ to avoid having e-mail from the same source sent to the Junk Mail folder in the future.

Mailblocks:

Click the Addresses tab. Click New. Type: [email protected] Make sure ‘Accept Mail From This Address’ is selected under Receiving Options. Uncheck ‘Display in People Picker’ under Other options. Click Submit. Click OK.

MailShield:

Click Friends from the toolbar. Click Add. Type: [email protected] Click OK.

MailWasher:

Click Tools, then Blacklist & Friends. Click Add… on the right, the Friends list side. Make sure Plain email address is selected. Type: [email protected] Click OK. Click OK.

McAfee Spamkiller:

Click Friends from the sidebar. Click Add. Type: [email protected] Click OK.

MSN:

Click on Settings: E-mail | Junk e-mail (it’s at the bottom left of the screen, just above Calendar) On the E-mail settings screen, click Junk E-Mail Guard. Select Safe List. In the space provided under “Add people to the safe list”, enter [email protected]. Click Add.

oddpost:

Check your ‘Probably Spam’ folder. If you see that our newsletter was incorrectly filtered out, select it, and click the ‘Move to Inbox and Mark as Not Spam’ button.

Outlook 2003:

Add [email protected] to your Safe List. Add [email protected] to your Personal Contacts in your Outlook Address Book. Open any desired e-mail, then select Mark as Not Junk.

SpamAssassin:

Add the following entry to your user_prefs file, which is found in the .spamassassin subdirectory on your web/mail server:

whitelist_from [email protected]

Save the user_prefs file or move the updated copy to your .spamassassin subdirectory. If you have no user_prefs file in this subdirectory, create one: https://spamassassin.taint.org/doc/Mail_SpamAssassin_Conf.htmlhttps://www.cleanmymailbox.com/sa

SpamButcher:

Click the Configure button. Go to the Known Senders tab. Click Add under ‘Known Good Senders and Recipients’. Type: [email protected] Click OK. Click OK.

SpamCop:

Open your browser and go to: https://webmail.spamcop.net Log into your SpamCop account. Click on the Options icon in the toolbar. Under Mail Management (in the middle), click SpamCop Tools. Select Manage your personal whitelist. Near the bottom, where it reads “Click here to add to your whitelist”, click on Click here. Enter [email protected] in the first empty slot. Click Submit.

Spameater Pro:

Click Filters from the sidebar. Click the Approved Senders tab. Click Add Filter. Type: [email protected] under Address. Choose ‘Full Email Address’ under Address Type. Select Email Domain. Click OK.

Spam Inspector:

Select Spam Inspector, then ‘Manage Friends List’ from either the Spam Inspector toolbar or from the Outlook menu. Make sure Email is selected under ‘Add a New Friend’. Type: [email protected] Click the >> button. Click Close.

Spam Interceptor:

Follow the Trusted link under > Authentication Lists. Enter the email address: [email protected] Click Add.

Spamkiller:

On the Spamkiller sidebar, click Friends. Click Add. Enter [email protected] and click the OK button.

SpamPal:

Click on the SpamPal system tray icon with the right mouse button. Click ‘Add to Whitelist’ from the menu. Type: [email protected] Click Add.

Spam Sleuth:

Select File, then Configure. Go to the Friends category. Make sure Active is checked. Type: [email protected] on a line by itself in the entry field. Click OK.

Verizon:

Go to your Verizon Inbox. Click Options. Select the Block Senders tab (near the top of the screen). On the Block Senders screen, you’ll see both a “Block Sender List” and a “Safe List”. In the space where it says “Enter e-mail address or sub domain to always accept even if the domain is blocked”, enter [email protected].

Yahoo! Mail

Open your Yahoo! mailbox. Click Mail Options. Click Filters. Click Add Filter. In the top row, labeled ‘From header:’ make sure Contains is selected in the pull-down menu. Click in the text box next to that pull-down menu, then enter the address: [email protected] At the bottom, where it says “Move the Message To:” select Inbox from the pull-down menu. Click the Add Filter button again.

If truthout has been filtered to your “bulk” folder, simply open the message and click on the “This is not Spam” link next to the “From” field.

Other providers:

If Truthout Newsletters are being filtered, try adding [email protected] to your Address Book or Contact list. If this option is not available, try moving the message to your ‘inbox’ or forwarding the message to yourself.

If subsequent messages continue to be filtered, call or e-mail your ISP’s technical support and ask how you can be sure to receive all e-mail from [email protected].

Domain: If they need to know the domain we’re mailing from, tell them: truthout.org

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As Donald Trump is inaugurated a second time, independent media organizations are faced with urgent mandates: Tell the truth more loudly than ever before. Do that work even as our standard modes of distribution (such as social media platforms) are being manipulated and curtailed by forces of fascist repression and ruthless capitalism. Do that work even as journalism and journalists face targeted attacks, including from the government itself. And do that work in community, never forgetting that we’re not shouting into a faceless void – we’re reaching out to real people amid a life-threatening political climate.

Our task is formidable, and it requires us to ground ourselves in our principles, remind ourselves of our utility, dig in and commit.

As a dizzying number of corporate news organizations – either through need or greed – rush to implement new ways to further monetize their content, and others acquiesce to Trump’s wishes, now is a time for movement media-makers to double down on community-first models.

At Truthout, we are reaffirming our commitments on this front: We won’t run ads or have a paywall because we believe that everyone should have access to information, and that access should exist without barriers and free of distractions from craven corporate interests. We recognize the implications for democracy when information-seekers click a link only to find the article trapped behind a paywall or buried on a page with dozens of invasive ads. The laws of capitalism dictate an unending increase in monetization, and much of the media simply follows those laws. Truthout and many of our peers are dedicating ourselves to following other paths – a commitment which feels vital in a moment when corporations are evermore overtly embedded in government.

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