Symantec 10490452 Administration Guide - Page 124

Subject, Message ID, Options, Quarantine, by clicking Display Full Headers.

Page 124 highlights

124 Working with Spam Quarantine Working with messages in Spam Quarantine for administrators To search message envelope "To" recipient ◆ Type in the To box to search the message envelope RCPT TO: recipient in all messages for the text you typed. You can search for a display name, the user name portion of an email address, or any part of a display name or email user name. If you type a full email address in the To box, only the user name portion of [email protected] is searched for. You can attempt to search for the domain portion of an email address by typing just the domain, but if more than 50% of the messages contain part of the search phrase, nothing will be displayed. See "Search details" on page 125. The search is limited to the envelope To:, which may contain different information than the header To: displayed on the message details page. To search "from" headers ◆ Type in the From box to search the From: header in all messages for the text you typed. You can search for a display name, email address, or any part of a display name or email address. The search is limited to the visible message From: header, which in spam messages is usually forged. The visible message From: header may contain different information than the message envelope. To search subject headers ◆ Type in the Subject box to search the Subject: header in all messages for the text you typed. To search the Message ID header ◆ Type in the Message ID box to search the message ID in all messages for the text you typed. You can view the message ID on the message details page in Spam Quarantine, by clicking Display Full Headers. In addition, most email clients have the capability of displaying the full message header, which includes the message ID. For example, in Outlook 2000, double click on a message to show it in a window by itself, click View and then click Options. The message ID is typically assigned by the first email server to receive the message and is supposed to be a unique identifier for a message. However, spammers may tailor the message ID to suit their purposes, such as to hide their identity. For legitimate email, the message ID may indicate the domain where the message was sent from or the email server used to send the message.

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124
Working with Spam Quarantine
Working with messages in Spam Quarantine for administrators
To search message envelope “To” recipient
Type in the To box to search the message envelope
RCPT TO
: recipient in all
messages for the text you typed.
You can search for a display name, the user name portion of an email
address, or any part of a display name or email user name. If you type a full
email address in the To box, only the user name portion of
is searched for. You can attempt to search for the
domain portion of an email address by typing just the domain, but if more
than 50% of the messages contain part of the search phrase, nothing will be
displayed. See
“Search details”
on page 125. The search is limited to the
envelope
To:
, which may contain different information than the header
To:
displayed on the message details page.
To search “from” headers
Type in the
From
box to search the
From:
header in all messages for the text
you typed.
You can search for a display name, email address, or any part of a display
name or email address. The search is limited to the visible message
From:
header, which in spam messages is usually forged. The visible message
From:
header may contain different information than the message envelope.
To search subject headers
Type in the
Subject
box to search the
Subject:
header in all messages for
the text you typed.
To search the Message ID header
Type in the
Message ID
box to search the message ID in all messages for the
text you typed.
You can view the message ID on the message details page in Spam
Quarantine, by clicking Display Full Headers.
In addition, most email clients
have the capability of displaying the full message header, which includes the
message ID. For example, in Outlook 2000, double click on a message to
show it in a window by itself, click
View
and then click
Options
.
The message ID is typically assigned by the first email server to receive the
message and is supposed to be a unique identifier for a message. However,
spammers may tailor the message ID to suit their purposes, such as to hide
their identity. For legitimate email, the message ID may indicate the domain
where the message was sent from or the email server used to send the
message.