How To Filter Spam Before It Gets To Your Iphone Email

Like most people, I have been putting up with spam since spam was invented. I can say that I’ve effectively resolved this issue in Outlook after a couple of years of trying different things. Ultimately, I’ve settled on Cloudmark software and it’s been great.

But I digress, this isn’t about Outlook. After this concerted effort to eliminate as much spam as possible from my inbox, I decided that it was finally time to start using a smartphone for email. My choices were Palm phones, Blackberrys, Windows based phones, Nokia and of course the iPhone. I chose the iPhone immediately. I used Palm when Palm wasn’t even a phone, but not for email. Blackberry was the best alternate choice and with respect to email only, might have been a better choice.

A year ago, I had just set up a website for my client. Along with that she, of course, also established an email account. Her contact email was published on the website (against my recommendation) and within a couple of months the email bots had discovered her email and she was now a spam target. We took care of most of the issues by setting up filters in Outlook which can be a painful process. But then she got a blackberry and all that work to eliminate spam could not be duplicated on the Blackberry. Well, I did what I always do when I can’t solve a problem. I Googled it: “reduce blackberry spam”. We found a program that you can add to your blackberry that provided pretty decent spam filtering and my client is a happy camper.

Fixing this problem wasn’t as obvious with the iPhone. Frankly, I did not think to ask the store associate how iPhone handles spam. I was too impressed with “Need for Speed”. I’ve never seen a phone run a game like that. iPhone is truly a handheld video game contender but again I digress. I bought the 16 gig version (which I probably won’t ever need, but – you know). I also increased my already unlimited account by another $35 for internet access. I cancelled my gym membership to pay for the increased cost of my iPhone and justified that by saying to myself that I would get in shape the old-fashioned way. I’d run, bike and exercise my way to thin-dom – outdoors! Don’t ask how that’s going…but I LOVE my iPhone.

And then it hit me. I never realized how much spam I get since I’ve eliminated most of it in my Outlook software. I was literally swamped. I was getting 100 Plus emails a day and 80% of that was spam. It was so bad frankly that it rendered the email on the iPhone not usable. A quick trip to the iPhone Apps store (via the Apps icon on the iphone) reveals no software that you can put on your iPhone to solve this problem. My trusty Google search yielded the same results. Apparantly nobody but me has a spam issue on their iPhone.

Again though, Google came to the rescue. This time, in a different way. I have had a gmail account for some time. Gmail allows you to route other email through its account. I didn’t use that feature too much, but I did have one account doing this. Thinking back, spam was never an issue with that account. Gmail was filtering the spam! So, I started passing all of my POP3 email accounts through gmail. I then read my gmail account using my iphone, Voila’! no spam. The way I have this set up is simple. I use the IMAP settings for the iphone and POP3 settings for Outlook. When my iphone reads the emails, it leaves the emails on the servers (by default). When my outlook gets the emails from gmail, it deletes them from the server. I rarely see spam. That problem is solved.

“Any issues?”, you ask. The only annoyance I have is that now that outlook is getting my emails forwarded from gmail, if I reply, my client gets an email from my gmail account instead of my business email. It’s supposed to use a default address that I set up but it doesn’t seem to be working correctly. I had to set up my business email account back up in Outlook and default to that. I have to make sure when I reply that the email I’m sending from is not a gmail account but is my real business account email…not gmail. It seems that there is an achilles heel in all good solutions but this one I can live with.

Copyright (c) 2009 Greg Newell