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Episode: 3972
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Title: HPR3972: Thunderbird inbox filtering: keeping a clean/orderly inbox.
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3972/hpr3972.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 18:08:31
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3972 for Tuesday the 24th of October 2023.
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Today's show is entitled, Thunderbird Inbox Filtering Keeping a Clean and Orderly Inbox.
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It is hosted by some guy on the internet, and is about 11 minutes long, it carries a clean
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flag. The summary is, Scotty talks about filtering you in box.
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You are listening to a show from the Reserve Q. We are airing it now because we had free
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slots that were not filled. This is a community project that needs listeners to contribute
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shows in order to survive. Please consider recording a show for Hacker Public Radio.
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Hello and welcome to another episode of Hacker Public Radio. I'm your host, some guy
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on the internet. Today, let's talk about Thunderbird. I know I've done a couple of shows
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on Thunderbird in past, and you guys should check those out if you're wondering about
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how to use Thunderbird. This time I'm going to actually include an image, and I'm going
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to keep it a little more specific. We're going to be talking about the inbox only in Thunderbird
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and a couple of filters to help keep your inbox clean.
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Well like I've discussed in previous episodes, I have numerous categories in my filters that
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pull out things like banking, education, etc. from the inbox into their own private
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directories. Then only things that's left is, well, stuff I don't really feel like filtering,
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right? There's going to be small bits and pieces that I'm just not really wanting to
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create filters for or add to existing filters. Maybe they are relevant in some way.
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So let's talk about that. Messages that you receive in your inbox that you do not want
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to archive, but they're not scam material either, right? They're not any form of threat
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or security risk. So they could just be garbage rubbish, right? So one of the things I
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do to keep my junk in my inbox to a minimal is I have a seven day rule, and it's composed
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of three filters mainly. Now I put these three filters near the bottom of my filter stack.
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One of the images you'll see my filter stack. I have a number of items in my filter stack
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redacted because they're very private. I don't want all that out in the world, but you'll
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see toward the bottom. I have them highlighted in a little box down there. It'll say, mark
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is red, two days, tag rubbish, five days, delete rubbish, seven days. Those three filters
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keep my inbox very clean. And I'll tell you how they work, right? Whenever new messages
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come into the inbox, I want the new messages to always stand out. So anything over two days
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old, that first filter of the three, which is mark red two days, well, anything that's
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over two days old will be marked as red so that it's no longer bold. So only the freshes
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of messages that arrive into the inbox will remain bold and like highlighted so that they're
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easier to just see on a glance. Everything else will be marked as red. So they'll still
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be there just not as they just won't stand out as much. Now the second filter of those three,
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which is the tag rubbish five days. Any message left in the inbox that is over five days
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old will automatically receive the rubbish tag. Yeah, the rubbish tag. I give it a color
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that is like a to me is a disgusting brownish green color that reminds me of something I'd
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never want to encounter. Anything that gets tagged as rubbish clearly means this has got to go.
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We need it to go away, but I don't manually delete it. I just leave it there because anything
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left in the box after seven days, which is the third filter delete rubbish seven days old.
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And it has the rubbish tag applied to it. The filter deletes that message from the inbox. Now what
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this means is I have seven days basically to decide what I want to do with that message. Either I
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want to archive it, build a filter to start filtering messages out from that domain, whatever,
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or just leave it there because in seven days, it'll it'll be gone anyways. I don't have to touch
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it. Now this is helpful. If you're like me and you sign up for steam and you have all these
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bunch of messages like whenever you have things on your steam wish list, steam sends you these
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reminder emails. Now I don't mind receiving emails from steam. There's a bunch of them I want to
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keep like whenever I buy a game, I'll get the invoice. I want to keep that. If ever I log in from
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a different computer, which I rarely do, it's normally whenever I wipe my computer and then I have
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to read login to steam. I get a message saying you've logged in from a different computer. I like
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having that email and I also have a tag applied to that type of message so that it comes in as important.
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Meaning if I did not log into another computer yet, I get that email. I want it to be big and bold
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in red letting me know, Hey, your account was just logged into a computer somewhere else. You need
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to you need to look at that. But that's another filter. I'm not going to talk about that right now.
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Either way, I got a nice little filter structure here. I put some numbers to the right of the filters,
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you know, just the first three letting you know in order how the filters are applied. These three
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that I've discussed here, the mark read two days, the tag rubbish five days and the delete rubbish
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seven days. I put all the way down at the bottom of the stack next to my manual filters because
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say for instance, if I forget for whatever reason, like if I get sick or something and I just don't
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feel like checking my email for a couple of days, you know, three, four days, when I do load up
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Thunderbird again, you know, I don't want those to be the first filters that run. You know what I'm saying?
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Because what will happen then is all my other filters that I have will not get a chance to save
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messages and pull them into their private categories, you know, their private directories. So I want
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all of that to happen first before the inbox cleaning filters can do their magic. Now typically keep
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my trash and junk directories empty. So that way, whenever new things get added, especially if one
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is added by accident, I can just go fish that out pretty easily. You know, I won't have to fish
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through a ton of messages to find the one that I want. I just go grab the one out there and,
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you know, save it. Now, before we end this episode, I'll just talk to you a little bit about the
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first three that I have up there. You'll see they're numbered 0, 0, 0, 1 and 0, 2 at the very top
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of the filter stack that deleted up there. That's for newsletters. I currently no longer wish to
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receive anything from, you know, not that they're bad or they're junk mail. It's just, you know,
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maybe I've grown out of that newsletter and I just need a break from it. I don't want to see it
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anymore. Now I'm not going to unsubscribe for anything, right? That's a waste of time going and
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unsubscribing. As some of you may have found out by now, there are places that apply shady tactics.
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You attempt to unsubscribe and they try to make you go through like this long list of steps in order
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to unsubscribe or they make it virtually impossible for you to unsubscribe. I've had political campaigns
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contact me in the past and this is many years ago. I mean, I'm probably still receiving messages
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from them, but my filters work so great. I never actually see them anymore. But in the past, before
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I got set up the way that I am now, I would attempt to unsubscribe. The problem is the moment you
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click on the unsubscribe button, it takes you to the page where you're supposed to, you know, select
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your options for unsubscribing, but then it immediately redirects you so you never actually get
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a chance to select what you want. And it'd be all sorts of shady practices like this where you
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know, it's like screw it. Why? Why unsubscribe? Why go through all of that headache and I've even
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seen services, they're advertising services now where grant this company unfettered access to your
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email account and they will unsubscribe you from blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Why do that? Simply
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throw that domain into a filter and be done with them. They're gone now. You never see them again.
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Now tell me, is that not the same thing as unsubscribing, right? It is never seen again. So with that
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first filter, the deleted again, just newsletters I'm no longer interested in. The second one, which
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has the zero one to the right of it, that's called junk domains. Yeah, that's actual junk,
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crap like, you know, the political campaign. Once you end up on any political campaign list,
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you never come off and they basically toss you onto every other list known to man. So you're in
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it for the long haul. That's okay because the moment I actually get a message from a campaign
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that I've never received before. So now and all of a sudden my inbox shows a new campaign message.
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I smile because now I finally get to do something again, right? Like email is interesting again
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because now that I have Thunderbird, email has become pretty boring. Like, I no longer have any
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troubles. Nothing ever shows up anymore. So, you know, I finally get some junk to deal with. I
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throw it in the filter and then, you know, now it's back to boring again. Now it's gone. And then
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there's junk subjects. And that's roughly the same thing. It's not used that much. It's only like
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one or two things that'll happen for. But those, yeah, I'll just leave it at that. Now, you also
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look down there. You see scams. Yes. Anytime I receive a scat like most Gmail addresses never reach
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my inbox. I have Gmail automatically pulled out and thrown in a scam folder. Now anyone that I
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know of, they uses a Gmail address. There's a filter just above that. You can't see it because it's
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redacted. But those people's Gmail accounts are in that filter. So that way they don't get caught in
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it. But everything else does because that's where the vast majority of my scam emails come from.
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These random Gmail accounts pretending to be Amazon or nor Nanavirus or whatever, you know,
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but lately I've been getting less and less of those. You know, I haven't received very many
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scams. I think the last one I received is back in April. So email has gotten really boring for me.
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I've been kind of waiting for more scams, more interesting things. I have to go out and find trouble
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these days. If you're having trouble with email and you want this boring life that I have where
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email is just figured out and it just works on its own, you know, just kind of chugs long. All you
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have to do is open it. Well, here's some ideas. You know, here's a few things you can use. And if
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you like some more detail, I'll be doing more of these Thunderbird shows in the future. But that's it
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for now. Catch you guys in the next episode. Take it easy.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio. Hacker Public Radio does work. Today's show was
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contributed by a HBR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording podcasts,
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you can click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is. Hosting for HBR has been
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kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive and our sings.net. On the Sadois
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status, today's show is released on their creative comments, attribution 4.0 international license.
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