<p dir="ltr">To make yourself independend from other people's spam taste you could also define a filter in gmail to never mark these messages as spam.</p>
<p dir="ltr">Best regards,<br>
Jakob<br>
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<div class="gmail_quote">Am 18.03.2015 09:24 schrieb "Bert Freudenberg" <<a href="mailto:bert@freudenbergs.de">bert@freudenbergs.de</a>>:<br type="attribution"><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">
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On 18.03.2015, at 08:47, Eliot Miranda <<a href="mailto:eliot.miranda@gmail.com" target="_blank">eliot.miranda@gmail.com</a>> wrote:<br>
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<div dir="ltr">Hi All,
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<div> I've just found several commit messages in gmail's spam folder. These commits are important to me. Since I think I'm correct in thinking gmail's assessment of what's spam depends on many users I'm guessing that gmail has decoded these messages
are spam because subscribers to commits are marking them as so. Doing so means I'm less likely to see the messages but they're important to me; it's how I see that other people have committed to the VM. So please, instead of marking these messages as spam,
unsubscribe from commits, or tolerate them.</div>
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<div>Even better: filter them. We don't have a separate commits list. Commits come to the main list. The only way to not see them without marking as spam would be subject filtering.</div>
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<div>If you go and tell gmail that you don't consider these to be spam, maybe it will personalize that for you?</div>
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<div style="font-family:Helvetica"><span style="font-family:Helvetica">- Bert -</span></div>
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