Setting your Spam Filter

The separate Spam folder area in MD.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




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Automakers face skeptical senators on aid plan (AP)

Auto executives, from left, General Motors Chief Executive Officer Richard Wagoner, UAW President Ron Gettelfinger,  Ford Chief Executive Officer Alan Mulally, and Chrysler Chief Executive Officer Robert Nardelli testify on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Dec. 4, 2008, before a Senate Banking Committee hearing on the auto industry bailout.  (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)AP - U.S. automakers drew fresh skepticism from lawmakers Thursday in a rocky confrontation over their pleas for an expanded $34 billion rescue package they say they need to survive. Congressional analysts said one bailout plan under consideration would fall short of what the carmakers want.


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ineffable
\in-EFF-uh-bul\
adjective

incapable of being expressed in words : indescribable

unspeakable



not to be uttered : taboo

Example Sentence
Ed felt an ineffable joy at the sight of his son walking toward him from the plane. "Every tone was a testimony against slavery, and a prayer to God for deliverance from chains. The hearing of those wild notes always depressed my spirit, and filled me with ineffable sadness," wrote Frederick Douglass in his autobiography. Reading Douglass's words, it's easy to see that "ineffable" means "indescribable" or "unspeakable." And when we break down the word to its Latin roots, it's easy to see how those meanings came about. "Ineffable" comes from "ineffabilis," which joins the prefix "in-," meaning "not," with the adjective "effabilis," meaning "capable of being expressed." "Effabilis" comes from "effari" ("to speak out"), which in turn comes from "ex-" and "fari" ("to speak").

*Indicates the sense illustrated in the example sentence.
The wise realizing through meditation the timeless Self, beyond all perception, deep in the cave of the heart leave pleasure and pain far behind. The man who knows he is neither body nor mind, but the eternal Self, divine principle of existence, finds the source of all joy and lives in joy abiding.

Upanishads (c. B.C. 800) Hindu Poetic Dialogues on Metaphysics

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