https://github.com/stevenirby/unfuckemail/blob/master/filter...
It's probably safe to assume this is a marketing trick, though.
Then, by a year or so, more and more promotional/commercial emails appeared in my inbox, and nowadays I delete 10/20 of those emails from my inbox daily. I don't understand as it worked flawlessly before. So, what happened here? Google fucked up this functionality or there is more?
Thank you!
I did this 4 years ago on my personal email address and I never had to recover any email.
You can also make it a bit smarter by searching for the header “List-unsubscribe” instead. Less false-positives when someone forwards you an email that contains the word unsubscribe.
<entry>
<category term="filter"/>
<title>Mail Filter</title>
<id>tag:mail.google.com,2008:filter:2682352652378687976</id>
<updated>2025-08-21T11:26:31Z</updated>
<content/>
<apps:property name="from" value="(yes-reply@randomdailyurls.com OR yes-reply@unfuck.email)"/>
<apps:property name="hasTheWord" value="category:(CATEGORY_PERSONAL)"/>
<apps:property name="shouldAlwaysMarkAsImportant" value="true"/>
<apps:property name="shouldArchive" value="false"/>
<apps:property name="shouldNeverSpam" value="true"/>
</entry>
I think I'll skip this.For work email, various salespeople reaching out to sell things, often things completely unrelated to my job title, are highly annoying. I report all of them to spam to Google and block their emails, but the approaches of modern salespeople are increasingly indistinguishable from those of mass spammers (burner domains, "prewarming", multiple scheduled human looking followups, etc.)
Things I do intentionally subscribe to (such as airline offers) tend to switch their send-from address or title or something else every so often and are no longer caught by filters. At some volume, this becomes an occasional annoying toil to deal with. Note, I don't use Gmail, unlike ~90-95% of people in my circles.
I now have another address that I am much more restrained about sharing.
Honestly, I think it all comes down to discipline. You should immediately unsubscribe if you do not want someone’s newsletter.
But my problem is different: I get a lot of emails that I do want to receive, but I do not need to read them right away - or sometimes never. For example, mortgage monthly statements, which I really only need at tax time.
I also have my own Google Apps Script app 'Gmaid' though to keep my inbox useable. It auto deletes / archives mail after X days when its tagged '3-day delete' or '5-day archive' etc. I have filters to apply appropriate tags and remove them if I want to keep something from being tidied. I wonder if I could use these filters to tag stuff that currently gets through?
On macOS I do something similar for files with Hazel: I have special folders whose contents Hazel deletes at set times after the files were added to the folders. Sort of a system for custom deletion timing, it solves the problem of "I probably won't need this, but I'd like to keep it around for a while in case I do; but I don't want to have to remember to manually delete it later."
I move all the crap emails to one folder and hit the "unsubscribe button" and lo and behold they all unsubscribe.
I then delete them all
At the very least, I'd think there would be an easy way to put all email from new senders in another folder, since these are almost always junk (and never require urgent review). Or am I the only one getting all this AI slop?
I'm not getting any AI slop spam (or at least none that's made it past Gmail's spam filters), but I really like this idea of segregating email from new senders. That would be very useful.
{ "conditions": [ { "lookHow": "exists", "lookHeader": "list-unsubscribe", "lookFor": "exists \"list-unsubscribe\"", "lookIn": "header" } ], ... }
While Gmail's filters are generally pretty good, Gmail's system for organizing and managing those filters is terrible.
Does anyone know of an app or service that solves that problem?
balls187•1h ago
I’m considering this, but curious if the name is a turn off for others like it does for me?
As a baby GenX(er), is that a generational thing?
captainkrtek•1h ago
balls187•16m ago
blitzar•1h ago
Sent by unfuck email. Go un-fuck yourself.
hiatus•1h ago
balls187•9m ago
It's more akin to how attitudes regarding professionalism shift generationally--e.g. tattoos.
kilroy123•1h ago
Fair enough about the name. I am just sick of all the notifications you get from email. Or the dreaded iOS badge that says 1 million unread emails.
ocrow•1h ago
jonhohle•1h ago
I’ve long thought the casualness of everything is our (GenX collective) fault, however. I see this as an extension of tshirt and jeans to work at an office job. The unforeseen consequence being the elimination of decorum everywhere. It’s not really about vulgarity, but a general lack of respect for others, standards for ourselves, and dissolving social culture. What language is reserved for shock, emphasis anymore?