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#1
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My 11 year old wants an email address. Can I setup a filter in Outlook 2003
that will only allow select email addresses to send email to my child? My OS is Windows Vista Home premium. |
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#2
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In the Junk E-mail filter settings you can use the "White List only"
setting. Then only the addresses/domains you want will go to the Inbox "Doug" wrote in message ... My 11 year old wants an email address. Can I setup a filter in Outlook 2003 that will only allow select email addresses to send email to my child? My OS is Windows Vista Home premium. |
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Vince Averello [MVP - Outlook] wrote:
In the Junk E-mail filter settings you can use the "White List only" setting. Then only the addresses/domains you want will go to the Inbox "Doug" wrote in message ... My 11 year old wants an email address. Can I setup a filter in Outlook 2003 that will only allow select email addresses to send email to my child? My OS is Windows Vista Home premium. But since this is defined within the mail profile used by the child, why couldn't the child then delete the filter? Outlook wasn't designed to censor a user against themself. An 11 year-old can certainly figure out how to wander around in the configuration settings of Outlook. Of course, censoring who can send her e-mails when she is at home won't do anything to block them when she is at school, an Internet cafe, or at a public library, or for her to create her own e-mail account that Dad doesn't know about. Some e-mail providers will provide admin and user privileges on an account. That is, the owner of the account can make setting changes that the user cannot alter. So, for example, the owner can setup a whitelist and enable a setting to allow e-mails only from senders in that whitelist. While the user can login to their account via the webmail interface, they cannot alter those owner-protected settings. Whether doable depends on whether or not the e-mail provider supports this dual-mode login (where owner can do more than a user). Obviously none of this has any effect if daughter doesn't actually use that censored account and instead goes create her own (at the same e-mail provider or elsewhere), creates another mail profile for those other accounts, or uses their webmail interface instead of Outlook. Because Doug used Microsoft's webnews interface, and since Microsoft lies about the sender's ID in the NNTP-Posting-Host header (and no longer includes the sender's IP address in their X-WBNR-Posting-Host header), I can't tell from which ISP that Doug used to submit his post, but then he might be using a different e-mail provider than his ISP. If Doug is using Comcast then what I described is available for censoring which senders are allowed and preventing the user from altering that list. |
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