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  2. GNU Mailman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Mailman

    A very early version of Mailman was written by John Viega while a graduate student, who then lost his copy of the source in a hard drive crash sometime around 1998. [6] Ken Manheimer at Corporation for National Research Initiatives (CNRI), who was looking for a replacement for Majordomo, then took over development.

  3. Email storm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Email_storm

    An email storm (also called a reply all storm or sometimes reply allpocalypse) is a sudden spike of "reply all" messages on an email distribution list, usually caused by a controversial or misdirected message. Such storms can start when even one member of the distribution list replies to the entire list at the same time in response to an ...

  4. Sieve (mail filtering language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sieve_(mail_filtering...

    The Sieve scripts may be generated by a GUI-based rules editor or they may be entered directly using a text editor. The scripts are transferred to the mail server in a server-dependent way. The ManageSieve protocol (defined in RFC 5804) allows users to manage their Sieve scripts on a remote server. Mail servers with local users may allow the ...

  5. MARC (archive) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MARC_(archive)

    MARC was founded in 1996 to serve as a unified archive of electronic mailing lists, similar to what DejaNews (now Google Groups) did for Usenet. MARC uses a MySQL relational database to store its messages and Perl to access the data. [1] The archive can be searched for mailing list names, authors, subject lines and full-text of the e-mail messages.

  6. Email digest - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Email_digest

    An email digest is an email that is automatically generated by an electronic mailing list and which combines all exchanged emails during a time period (e.g. day, week, month, etc.) or when a volume limit is reached (e.g. every 10 or 100 messages) into one single message.

  7. Control excessive spam email - AOL Help

    help.aol.com/articles/Control-excessive-spam-email

    • Mark spam and mailing lists. • Create filters to keep your inbox clear. • Create strong and unique passwords for your accounts. • Check credit card and bank statements for illegitimate transactions. • Log in to your shopping accounts to make sure orders weren't falsely placed.

  8. Create, edit or delete To Do Lists in AOL Mail

    help.aol.com/articles/create-edit-or-delete-to...

    1. Click the Calendar icon in AOL Mail | click Calendar full view. 2. Right click on the To Do List you want to delete. 3. Click Edit List. 4. Click Delete. 5. Select the option you want • Delete all the to do's - keeps the list by delete the To Do's. • The whole calendar - deletes the list with all the To Do's. 6. Click Delete.

  9. Restore deleted or missing contacts in AOL Mail

    help.aol.com/articles/restore-deleted-or-missing...

    Click Contacts from the left panel in AOL Mail. 2. Click More | Restore. 3. Select a date to restore your contacts to from the drop-down menu. 4. Click Restore.