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Episode: 4264
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Title: HPR4264: Mintcast, high crimes and misdemeanors.
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr4264/hpr4264.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 22:15:14
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 4264 for Thursday 5 December 2024.
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Today's show is entitled, Minkast High Crimes and Misdemeanors.
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It is hosted by some guy on the internet, and is about 31 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, Scotty talks about Minkast Episode 450 Crumbling Foundations.
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Hello and welcome to another episode Hacker Public Radio.
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I am your host, some guy on the internet.
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It's been a little while since I had a chance to talk about email, and I've been given
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a perfect opportunity to talk about email, and most of you already know I run Thunderbird.
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I greatly enjoy running Thunderbird.
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In the opportunity I brought us here, there's a podcast called the Minkast, great friends
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over there, Joe Moss, Bill Majid, Eric, shout out to the Minkast crew, Episode 450, labeled
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Crumbling Foundations.
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I have links down in the show notes.
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Now in the Linux Innerds portion of the show, if you check the show notes of the Minkast,
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again, links in the show notes of HPR, Section 7 within the Innerds, they discuss mailboxes
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and devices.
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Now, a very interesting thing was said there, and I just had to reply.
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And because of their wonderful license, they use a free culture license over their CCBYSA.
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I was able to pull a clip and use it here in the show.
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So let's go ahead and start off with Majid, or Anne Apologies, if the pronunciation is
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not accurate.
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The next one on the list is by keeping your mailbox and your devices secure and clean.
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Now, this kind of seems a little bit like pissing in the wind, you know, keeping all the
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myriad of email addresses, all the different things that they link into you and whatever
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and keeping them, you know, I used to try and be the guy with, you know, zero unread emails.
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I love giving up now.
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Woo, so as you guys can tell, it doesn't sound like he's using Thunderbird just from hearing
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a little clip from Majid, right?
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And when he mentioned that he doesn't, he no longer attempts to keep the zero unread,
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I don't know if there's a large amount of people that like to have a zero inbox.
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So I'm not sure if that's what he was referring to, or if he legitimately met zero unread.
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Well, regardless of which was said or met, he can have them both using Thunderbird and
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his fantastic filtering system.
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Now, let me just be clear, I'm not affiliated with Thunderbird, Mozilla, their foundations,
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any of that.
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I have not been asked to say or do anything on their behalf.
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I found a solution in that project and I'm very enthusiastic about sharing the solution.
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Let's go ahead and roll through another clip before we actually get to the solutions that
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I want to propose here.
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Just a few seconds later, Joe mentioned this, I do have rules set up so that subscriptions
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are automatically marked as red because they can't make them auto-delete.
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Now Joe actually said a little bit more around that and it sounds like Joe either is a Thunderbird
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user or he does use a client and has a pretty good handle on the client's capabilities.
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Now I'm guessing Thunderbird should be able to accommodate Joe with his auto-deleting
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or the subscriptions.
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This doesn't seem like a very difficult thing to do, it just depends on how he wants
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to do it.
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But I think it's more than possible.
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I would need to actually sit down and have a conversation with him, toss around a few
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things.
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The first being is he actually using Thunderbird.
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Let's move on.
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Now the portion of the show where the high crimes and Mr. Meeners occurred was when Bill said
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this.
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Email is like a constantly running faucet.
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It would be impossible to try to keep up with for any period of time.
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Exactly.
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I agree with that entirely.
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Wow.
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Oh, wow.
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Man, I had to go call my grief counselor, I mean, after hearing that, can't keep up with
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it.
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Now he was talking about self-hosting email, that would, you know, from what I've heard
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because I've never attempted it, but from what I've heard, that statement may be more
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accurate for self-hosting, but simply managing email, 2024 with Thunderbird after supernova,
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where you're getting this stuff, Bill.
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You too, Majid.
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You read the all, yeah, he was in there, agreeing wholeheartedly, and let me just tell
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you that sweet little angel Moss was nowhere in sight during these high crimes and Mr.
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Meeners over here.
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I did this.
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This, this, this Tom fool read that was going on over there, but enough yak at the yak.
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I'm going to go ahead and take you into Thunderbird and let's discuss the solutions.
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Now this next part here is going to be for a Thunderbird user because I'm just going
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to speak through it, give you enough details that you can understand.
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If you're a Thunderbird user now, if you're not, we can have a conversation later on and
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bring you up to speed with more detail.
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And I'll try to leave some links in the show notes to kind of help point you through some
|
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of what I'm saying as well, but I've talked about this enough in the past and I'm eager
|
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to talk more about it, but let's get into the filters.
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Now, you've got your email account.
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You're probably using email in the browser.
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You should stop doing that and go ahead and get yourself a Thunderbird client.
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Get logged in, pull down as much your email as possible, close your client, then reopen
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it.
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Now I personally like to use a primary password.
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It used to be called master password, but you know, a while ago they did a lot of
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changes between master and main and all of that with GitHub and a few other places,
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a few other projects adopted that.
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Nonetheless, it's called the primary password.
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This is so that you, for more security, rather than constantly reauthenticating through your
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client to gain access to your emails, which are stored locally.
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You protect that data using the primary password so you don't necessarily reauthenticate
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you just, you know, you still have protection though.
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Now I'm on a Linux system and between Linux and Windows or Mac system, what I've learned
|
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is hotkeys are different depending on the system you're using.
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So if you, if you go to file up on your top menu bar up there and you see the option
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that says download and sync now, I really wish they had a hot key for it, but I mean,
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you can use your menu shortcuts to get to it pretty quickly in Linux.
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It's old F L S that'll get you over to the download and sync messages dialog box.
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When you open that up, you're going to see that a couple of checks boxes there for mail
|
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messages, your news group messages and unscent messages.
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Then it's going to be a button on the right hand side of that dialog box.
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You might have to resize it a little bit.
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I noticed on my system I had to do that.
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Click that button that says select over there and it's going to bring up a second dialog
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box.
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And this is where under this profile for each account that you have already authenticated
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and downloaded messages for, you're going to see all of the directories, you know, inbox
|
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drafts sent, yada yada, there's going to be those directories with a check box just
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to the right of them.
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Select every single one of those check boxes for all of your accounts.
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Now once you've done that, you want to hit OK, which is going to bring you back to that
|
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first dialog box, which says download and sync messages, then you're going to click
|
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OK with that.
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||||
It's going to make sure, especially your trash and your junk mail, which is important
|
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because if something accidentally gets sent to trash, you still want it synced locally
|
||||
where you can have it backed up.
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That's where we're getting around to next.
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Once everything is downloaded and synced locally, that doesn't mean it's off of the server
|
||||
if you're using iMap.
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||||
Pop 3, well, you're on your own there.
|
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But with iMap, you'll just have a copy locally.
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||||
Then you can back up your Thunderbird directory, you know, depending on whether you're using
|
||||
a flat pack or whatever, I'm not going to get into that.
|
||||
But you can back up your Thunderbird directory.
|
||||
And now you'll have a copy of all your emails locally.
|
||||
You can dump that, you know, if you just tarball it, you can dump that tarball over on your
|
||||
NAS or whatever and by the boom, by the bank.
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All your emails are now synced locally and you have an offline copy.
|
||||
So if you do blow something up, you can restore.
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Not having to go online and download them all over again.
|
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Once that sync is done, now we're going to hold down Alt, press T and then hit F. That's
|
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going to take us to the tool menu and then to our filters with which are in tools.
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From there, the very first filter that I would recommend you creating, this is all vanilla,
|
||||
I should say.
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No third party extensions and anything I'm talking about.
|
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So you don't have to worry about that.
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But there's a filter, the very first one, I like to call it the inbox guardian, but you
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can refer to it as a bouncer because that's basically what it does.
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So the guardian just has a list.
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Well, first of all, let's talk about the design of it first.
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So you'll understand why we're doing what we're doing.
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There's only about a dozen or two dozen domains for which most people want to receive email
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from.
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I mean, just regular people, not like a business dealing with thousands, hundreds of thousands
|
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of clients or anything.
|
||||
So for most average people, a dozen, maybe two dozen domains you're going to want to receive
|
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mail from and that's much easier to manage than the hundreds of thousands of domains you
|
||||
do not want to receive mail from.
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So you create a guardian filter and what that filter does is has that list of that one
|
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dozen or two dozen, however many it is for you, the much more manageable number within
|
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it.
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And the rules go like this, anything that's not on the list automatically goes to trash.
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That alone will clean up your inbox dramatically.
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Guys, the future goes on and you subscribe to new things or whatever or a good example.
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My bank uses multiple domains.
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So some of the marketing material may come from a separate domain.
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It's still legitimately my bank doing it, but you get what I'm saying.
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So in a situation like that, you may have to add a few other domains to your bouncer,
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but that's much, much easier to do than trying to filter all the trash.
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You know what I mean?
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Now for those of you out there that don't know what I mean by the domain, when you see
|
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an email address, it's going to be useratdomain.com or you know dot net dot org, whatever.
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Never mind the user part, only the at domain.
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So at Amazon or at wherever, that's what you're going to want to save in the bouncer.
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So the bouncer knows if it's coming from this domain, it is a legitimate domain that you
|
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have checked out and they are allowed to pass through to the inbox, everything else trash.
|
||||
You can also set a little option on there as well, mark them as red before they get sent
|
||||
to the trash.
|
||||
And what's important, make sure you select the move a message to trash versus delete,
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||||
because I'm going to get into those options a little bit later on.
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||||
Remember when Joe mentioned he'd like to have the subscriptions automatically deleted.
|
||||
Yeah, we'll get into that later on, but right now we're using move to trash because yeah.
|
||||
Now when you set this filter up at the top, it's going to say apply filter when you want
|
||||
to always have manually run.
|
||||
You want to check the box for getting new mail and then in the option filter before junk
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classification.
|
||||
And I also have periodically every 10 minutes selected as well.
|
||||
When you're configuring a list that you want to compare against, you want to use match
|
||||
all of the following, because in Thunderbird, there'll be three radio boxes that you can
|
||||
check up.
|
||||
There's going to be match all of the following match any of the following and match all
|
||||
messages.
|
||||
We're going to use the first one, match all of the following, then you create your list.
|
||||
So an example, first of all, all of the options that I'm using are from.
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That's what we're targeting, who wears it coming from, then it's going to be the next selection,
|
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which is does not contain or it says doesn't contain, but yes, you get the point.
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||||
So it's from doesn't contain and then the last portion, it'll be the domain that you
|
||||
want to specify as being allowed to enter the inbox.
|
||||
So an example, from doesn't contain Amazon.com or excuse me, at Amazon.com.
|
||||
Now what that's going to do is anybody trying to send you scam messages pretending to be
|
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from the Amazon domain.
|
||||
Their message is automatically now going to get filtered to the trash, because they're
|
||||
not sending it from the legitimate Amazon domain, even though the email has been decorated
|
||||
to appear as though it is a legitimate message from the Amazon company.
|
||||
It doesn't come from the domain, therefore the bouncer doesn't let it in the inbox.
|
||||
It goes straight to trash.
|
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So once you got your bouncer set up, in my case, remember, I call it the inbox guardian,
|
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but it's a bouncer.
|
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Most people recognize that the word bouncer would have next categories or excuse me, tags.
|
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What these tags do, they're like ushers, right?
|
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These are filters that I'm talking about, by the way, I have a tag filter and I want you
|
||||
to think about it like a usher.
|
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If you've ever been to a concert or a church or some large event, ushers are the people
|
||||
that sort of help you navigate the event, help you find your seating, help you find what
|
||||
the restrooms are, yada yada.
|
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So I want you to think about the tag usher.
|
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A good example of an important tag filter that you can set up, TLTP codes, any show they
|
||||
were talking about, how, you know, when you're using two-factor authentication, one of
|
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the places you can have that arrive to is email, because I'd prefer to have it in email
|
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versus SMS Joe and you set up a tag filter.
|
||||
So it's just a regular filter and you just name it whatever you want, but I'm just going
|
||||
to give you an example here, right?
|
||||
You can call it, you know, tag important that way when you read it, you know exactly
|
||||
what it's doing.
|
||||
It's tagging messages as important.
|
||||
Apply filter when always run manually, because you want to be able to do it manually whenever
|
||||
you need to and getting new message, I mean, excuse me, getting new mail filter before
|
||||
junk classification.
|
||||
For these type, I do not use the periodically every 10 minutes.
|
||||
I don't check that box, but down in the radio button section, I have match any of the following
|
||||
and then from there, you can fill in the things that you want to be able to basically
|
||||
reject.
|
||||
So when the TOTP code comes in, they always have like the, for instance, once as your security
|
||||
code, blah, blah, blah, you can just copy that part that says your security code and put
|
||||
that into this filter.
|
||||
So it'll be subject contains your security code.
|
||||
Now this will only apply to things that were allowed to enter and exist within the inbox.
|
||||
So if the bouncer let it in and it contains this as its subject, it will then be tagged
|
||||
as important.
|
||||
So now that you've got the understanding with the tag style filters, same thing for invoices
|
||||
and whatever else you want to tag, news, letters and subscriptions, blah, blah, blah.
|
||||
So those, I want you to think about those like ushers.
|
||||
Another round of usher style filters will be your category filters.
|
||||
What they do, they're like helping you find your seat or whatever, right?
|
||||
So a category filter would be, let's say work.
|
||||
You have your work domain, you don't want those messages just sitting in the inbox, you
|
||||
want to filter them to the work directory.
|
||||
So you have a filter set up for mind is just cat hyphen work, because you know that cat
|
||||
is category, especially if you've done anything with ethernet, cat six, blah, blah, blah.
|
||||
Most of you have set up a category style filter before, but this is for remember we got
|
||||
new people in the audience as well.
|
||||
So cat hyphen work is the name that I have on mine.
|
||||
I have the manually run check along with getting new mail.
|
||||
Remember filter before junk classification.
|
||||
And on this one, I also have the periodically every 10 minutes selected as well down in
|
||||
the radio box section.
|
||||
We have to match any of the following, which is the middle radio button.
|
||||
And then you could do the from contains the email address in this case or or you could
|
||||
do the domain in there because if it's from work, you could just put the domain of work,
|
||||
but you know, whatever.
|
||||
And what I like to do with my filters as far as the perform these actions on this kind
|
||||
of thing, I have a status check.
|
||||
So set junk status to and then I have it not junk.
|
||||
So that's the first thing I want to make sure that the work stuff does not ever get set
|
||||
as junk.
|
||||
Then it moves it from the inbox over to the work category.
|
||||
So the work of director, excuse me.
|
||||
So those are your category filters, right?
|
||||
So you're tagging your category filters.
|
||||
Those are your ushers.
|
||||
They helping all of the new messages that were allowed to get into the inbox now get out
|
||||
of the inbox into their assigned seats, which is in their directories.
|
||||
Once they're in their directories and everybody's where they need to be or most of them anyway,
|
||||
they'll be a few stragglers because remember, you don't want to have a thousand categories
|
||||
in your email address, right?
|
||||
I tried that before having everything like meticulously categorized and it was just a pain.
|
||||
You know, you get categories and subcategories and everything.
|
||||
Just it was just a pain.
|
||||
I generalize as much as I can and everything outside of that.
|
||||
Those things are allowed to just stay in the inbox.
|
||||
In the reason why is because these next three filters, they're called the inbox cleaner.
|
||||
Now, even though I say it as the one object, the inbox cleaner, it is composed of three separate
|
||||
filters.
|
||||
So there's inbox cleaner, zero, one and two.
|
||||
And here's how it functions zero.
|
||||
Only checks to see if the message is over a day old.
|
||||
That's all it does.
|
||||
If it's over a day old, the status is checked and applied.
|
||||
So it says it's not junk, but market is red.
|
||||
So that way when the new stuff comes in, that's allowed to enter the inbox due to the
|
||||
guardian allowing it to pass, it'll stand out.
|
||||
Anything old that's a day old, it's marked as red and sitting in the inbox because it
|
||||
doesn't have an usher sending it to a seat somewhere, right?
|
||||
And a good example of that.
|
||||
I like to know when an item on my steam wish list, so steam steam powered is where if
|
||||
you play PC games, many people go to purchase their computer games from, any who items on
|
||||
my wish list, when they go on sale, like now during the steam winter sale, I like being
|
||||
notified about that.
|
||||
I don't want to keep those messages forever, but I like being notified.
|
||||
And I also don't want to create a separate category for that.
|
||||
It's nice just being able to look in my inbox and go, oh, yeah, that's on sale, I might
|
||||
actually go purchase it, right?
|
||||
So I like having those things in the inbox.
|
||||
But the first cleaner zero with that would do is says, okay, that's more than a day old.
|
||||
It's now marked as red automatically.
|
||||
And I'll just call this the default settings for when filter is applied.
|
||||
And that is the manual run, getting new mail with the filter before junk classification
|
||||
and the periodically every 10 minutes.
|
||||
Select the default filter apply settings.
|
||||
And then from there in the radio box section, I have match all of the following.
|
||||
And only thing we're matching is agent days, which is greater than one, right?
|
||||
More than one day old, marked as red.
|
||||
If it's still in the inbox, remember all of these filters and Thunderbird only automatically
|
||||
apply to the inbox.
|
||||
We can manually apply them to other directories, but let's move on.
|
||||
Inbox cleaner one, remember, we just did zero.
|
||||
So now we're on one.
|
||||
What this does is if the message is still in the inbox and it is older than five days,
|
||||
make sure that it's marked as red, make sure that it's status is not junk.
|
||||
But apply the tag rubbish to it.
|
||||
All right, so within five days, you haven't done anything with it.
|
||||
And it's just sitting in the inbox.
|
||||
It is now classified as rubbish.
|
||||
So an usher came along, give it the tag, here you go, you're now rubbish.
|
||||
There's some other checks in there as well.
|
||||
I also have, so it's got the default filter apply rules under the radio box section.
|
||||
I have match all of the following, which is the agent days greater than five.
|
||||
And then I also have tags does not contain important invoice, you know, yada.
|
||||
So these are things that if they come into the inbox and they're still there,
|
||||
like a TOTP code or something, I do not want them being marked as rubbish.
|
||||
So you get what I mean?
|
||||
So this is just a way of making sure that it has to have no tag pre-applied to it.
|
||||
And it's just sitting in the inbox for five days.
|
||||
The final portion of the inbox cleaner, which is, you know, in my case, it's called inbox cleaner two.
|
||||
If the message is older than seven days, and has the tag rubbish, right?
|
||||
This is like a little safety thing here.
|
||||
If it's older than seven days and has rubbish, tag placed on it,
|
||||
then move it over to the trash.
|
||||
And I also have the underactions perform, set status not junk, because it doesn't mean it's junk
|
||||
just because I'm not doing anything with it.
|
||||
Again, I want my notifications from steam.
|
||||
So it's not junk, mark as red, and move it to the trash.
|
||||
Because if I haven't done anything in seven days, then I'm not going to do anything with it.
|
||||
So the inbox cleaner, those three filters,
|
||||
filter zero, you know, inbox cleaner zero, inbox cleaner one, and inbox cleaner two,
|
||||
work to keep the inbox empty.
|
||||
Guardian lets you come in, the ushers give you your tag, and escort you to your seat.
|
||||
Anybody else?
|
||||
Well, you got seven days to sit around before you're asked to leave.
|
||||
There are other filters as well that I run manual ones,
|
||||
but I'm not going to get into those just yet.
|
||||
Those few that I just talked about,
|
||||
I believe that anyone running Thunderbird should be able to not only achieve inbox zero,
|
||||
but maintain it.
|
||||
You'll just have to put an effort into beginning to, you know, get your balancer set up properly,
|
||||
which means you're going to have to go through and figure out everything that you want to keep,
|
||||
everything that's allowed to go into the the balancer, and then go from there.
|
||||
After you've invested that little bit of time,
|
||||
getting your, your guardian set up, applying your tags if you want to do that and your categories,
|
||||
the categories are important because you really don't want them just cluttering your inbox.
|
||||
The reason why this is so great in the show when they were talking about keeping your inbox clean
|
||||
as a security measure, there are attacks that occur when, say, for instance,
|
||||
your password has been compromised due to, or unless your credentials have been compromised due to a data breach,
|
||||
some company somewhere was supposed to do the right thing when storing your credentials in the database,
|
||||
but they didn't.
|
||||
And guess what, they were breached.
|
||||
Well, they haven't quite gotten around to notifying you about that yet,
|
||||
but the attackers, I don't know, open web selling those credentials to whoever will have them.
|
||||
One of the things attackers will do when they're about to take over your account,
|
||||
they will flood you with a ton of other crap email messages so that you will miss the message about your account being swapped.
|
||||
You know what I mean?
|
||||
So normally whenever you go into an account and you try to change like the email address or the phone number tied to the account,
|
||||
or you change the password or something like that, they will send a message to the email registered on that account,
|
||||
saying, hey, just notification, you just changed your contact information, right?
|
||||
The way we typically contact you about security things, you just changed that.
|
||||
Well, if you don't see that message because it's getting buried between just tons of other crap that's flooding you out of nowhere,
|
||||
well, that just buys them a little bit more time after they've stored your account.
|
||||
Most people probably wouldn't want to be bothered with it,
|
||||
especially if you're checking the email in the browser, it may take you a few days to notice.
|
||||
Holy cow, your account was just hijacked.
|
||||
Now when you go to try and get that corrected, it becomes a little bit harder because, you know,
|
||||
the company is going to say, hey, apparently you changed just days ago.
|
||||
Now and all of a sudden, you don't like it and you have to explain
|
||||
well, it wasn't me, et cetera, et cetera, keeping a clean inbox and having categories along with tags,
|
||||
things that will just stand out whenever there's a change, you'll know.
|
||||
And if you were to be bombarded with trash from wherever, it's just going to go to the trash anyways.
|
||||
And it'll be marked as red before it goes to the trash.
|
||||
So it's not like it's going to be a huge number beside the trash can, you know,
|
||||
just sort of stare at you like, hey, all of a sudden you have 300 new messages you'd never done
|
||||
anything, but no, no, they might be 300 messages in there, but I wouldn't care.
|
||||
Now with Joe and the subscriptions that he wants to auto-delete,
|
||||
most of that can be taken care of with the category filter.
|
||||
So I do not recommend unsubscribing from anything.
|
||||
Or, or, or, but yet not, not even a category filter, just take them out off the guardian list,
|
||||
right? The bouncer. Just tell the bouncer, hey, that, that subscription that I signed up for over there,
|
||||
I don't want to see them for a while, right? Take their name off the list.
|
||||
Guess what? They just go straight to trash now.
|
||||
Think about it. If it goes straight to trash and you are not notified of any of it anymore,
|
||||
right? You don't have to go down there and keep going, mark as red or anything like that anymore.
|
||||
By the way, if you didn't know this, if you click on the directory within Thunderbird,
|
||||
hold down shift and tap the C key, the C isn't Charlie, it will mark that entire directory
|
||||
in all message within it as red. So learn, learn your hotkeys. They're pretty good.
|
||||
But for Joe in this situation, yeah, just take them, take them off the guardian and guess what?
|
||||
Now they go on the trash automatically. You're not bothered by it. Then in the future,
|
||||
there's something worth happening. Oh, man, you know what? I used to be a subscriber. Let me,
|
||||
let me check the trash real quick. Oh, yep, they're still in there. You can go ahead and grab
|
||||
that email address. Tell the bouncer, hey, you know what? This guy's cool again. Let him in.
|
||||
Never miss a beat. You didn't have to go back to the web as signed up for it again or nothing
|
||||
like that. So you're good. I hope you guys enjoyed this episode. Big thanks to Linux Mint.
|
||||
Mintcast crew, well, they're actually not the Linux Mintcast crew. They cover the Linux Mint
|
||||
distribution, but they're called the Mintcast podcast. Shout out to the Mintcast crew.
|
||||
Thank you guys for the wonderful show that you've been doing. Thank you, Moss,
|
||||
for not violating any sort of international treaties like Majid and Bill with their
|
||||
high grimes and Mr. Miners over here. Thank you, Joe as well. All you guys are great, Eric.
|
||||
Where's Eric? Eric was on a, well, you know what? Eric's fantastic. We love Eric,
|
||||
but he wasn't on the show this time for this episode. We got to get more of Eric.
|
||||
I'm some guy on the internet, and I'm out of here.
|
||||
You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does work.
|
||||
Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording
|
||||
podcast, you click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is. Posting for HBR has
|
||||
been kindly provided by an onsthost.com, the internet archive, and our syncs.net.
|
||||
On the satellite status, today's show is released on our creative comments,
|
||||
attribution 4.0 international license.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user