Option 1. Select the “ Home” menu, then select “ Junk” “ Junk E-mail Options“. Select the “ Blocked Senders” tab.
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To add an email address to the 'Blocked Senders List' click 'Add.' Type in the email address or domain address you would like to block and click 'OK'. When you are finished adding email addresses or domains to your blocked senders list click 'OK' to close the 'Junk email Options'.
Choose “ Add“. In the “ Enter an e-mail address or Internet domain name to be added to the list” box, enter the name or address that you want to add. You can add entire domains or just an email address as follows:.
[email protected]. @domain.com. domain.com. Select “ OK” when you are done. Option 2 This option works if you wish to block a single email address. Right-click on an email message that was received from the email address you wish to block.
Select “ Junk” “ Block Sender“. The email address is instantly added to your block list.
FAQ I have performed these steps but it doesn’t work for me. Why isn’t Outlook blocking the messages? Open the “ Junk E-mail Options” screen and check under the “ Safe Senders” tab to ensure the email address isn’t listed there. If an email address you wish to block is listed in your Contacts, uncheck the “ Also trust e-mail from my Contacts” box on this screen.
Filed Under: Tagged With:, Reader Interactions. In Outlook 2016 there seems to be 2 different “Blocked Senders” lists. You get to one from the inbox memu: Junk Junk Email Options Blocked Senders. You get to the other from a similar path, but starting inside of an open Email message. Careful examination will reveal their contents are different. If you are in doubt, delete everything in one of the two lists, and you will see that the other list remains. Why are there two?
Are they both used to filter received mail? When I mark an Email as Junk and indicate to block the sender that block seems to only flow to one of the lists. Do I have to keep the two lists synchronized? Can I leave one of the lists empty?
I really wish that SpamBayes would work for the 64-bit Outlook 2016. I can’t find a good replacement.
I saw one from a company in Russia, but I’m apprehensive about them after the recent Kaperski Labs issue. Pam F says. I was recently hacked on my Outlook email and the hacker has literally lists of people that this person sent a spam message to.
I physically have to go in and block each individual sender by typing in all these people’s email address (because believe it or not some are responding). I am unable to group and block these people because a message comes up and says “The email addres for this sender is internal to your organization and connot be added to this list”, mind you its a school email so I need it organized with no random people responding back to what this hacker sent. Susan says. What happens to the messages once they are blocked? Do they go to your deleted or junk folder? If they do how do i stop that from being shown. The reason for asking is that once I am away on holiday my emails from outlook get redirected to my bosses email and I would not want them to see emails coming from the blocked sender but also I would not want them to be able to see the junk or deleted folders as it would defeat the purpose of blocking the initial sender.
Thanks for your advise. Allan Ziirsen says.
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