Setting your Spam Filter

The separate Spam folder area in OH.net's webmail allows users to have messages that have been identified as spam automatically filtered out of their main e-mail inbox. These likely spam messages are stored in the Spam folder area of webmail but will not be downloaded to your computer in Outlook or any other POP3 e-mail client when you check mail.

Follow these instructions to setup your own personal spam filtering level:

  1. Click on the "Mailbox" tab and login.
  2. In the left-hand column under "Tools", click on the "Spam Filtering" link.
  3. Select the level (1 - 10) that you would like your mail to be filtered at (lower the number the more filtering that is done).
  4. Click "Save Settings."

Mail coming to your e-mail address with a spam score of or higher than the level you selected will be filtered into your Spam folder and not downloaded to your computer. You may check to see what messages have been filtered in webmail by clicking on the Spam folder link. If you have any questions about spam filtering or need assistance setting your filter, please e-mail techsupport@pa.net




Was this page helpful? Let us know how to improve your user experience.
Hide ThingBar
Customize
OH.net member? Sign in.

Copyright (c) 2008 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.

gravid
\GRAV-id\
adjective

pregnant



distended with or full of eggs

Example Sentence
“The film is about the world of mixed martial arts, a subject gravid with possibilities.” (Allen Barra, The New York Sun, April 29, 2008) "Gravid" comes from Latin "gravis," meaning “heavy.” It can refer to a female who is literally pregnant, and it also has the figurative meanings of "pregnant”: “full or teeming” and “meaningful.” Thus, a writer may be gravid with ideas as she sits down to write; a cloud may be gravid with rain; or a speaker may make a gravid pause before announcing his remarkable findings.

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.
Man was created with two eyes, so that with one he may see God's greatness, and with the other his own lowliness.

Shmuel Yosef Agnon (1888-1970) Israeli Author

We're sorry, but the weather module is currently unavailable. We're sorry for any trouble this may cause!

Click here to visit Weather.com and view your current forecast.