Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Smart Home
  3. Legacy Archives

Email Users Have Broad Definition of Spam

Add as a preferred source on Google
Email Users Have Broad Definition of Spam
Image used with permission by copyright holder

A new survey on email habits conducted by Q Intereactive and MarketingSherpa finds that many email users have a very broad definition of what constitutes email spam—it might not just be unsolicited offers for (ahem) goods and services, but also include email messages they’ve chosen to receive, and even email subscriptions they simply don’t find interesting. As a result, many email users are using “report spam” features offered by many email providers to report messages as spam, even if they elected to receive them.

“What this survey uncovered is a major disconnect in consumers’ understanding and use of the ‘report spam’ button,” said Q Interactive president and CEO Matt Wise, “as well as consumers’ definition of spam from ‘I didn’t sign up for it’ to ‘I don’t like it’—all of which signal that the current system of email spam filtering is a broken process.”

Recommended Videos

According to the survey results, 56 percent of the respondents consider marketing messages from known sender to be spam if the particular message is “just not interesting to me.” Fully half of the respondents consider companies to be spammers if they receive email from them too frequently, and 31 percent consider mail from known senders to be spam if the messages “were once useful but aren’t relevant anymore.”

When reporting messages as spam, almost half of the survey respondents (48 percent) said they cite reasons other than “did not sign up for email” as a reason for reporting a particular message as spam. Respondents also indicated some confusion about how spam reporting works: 43 percent of respondents said they use a spam reporting feature rather than using a mailing’s unsubscribe links, and 21 percent of respondents said they’d use a spam reporting feature to unsubscribe from a mailing list regardless of whether they thought it was spam.

Furthermore, 56 percent thought reporting a message as spam would block all mai from that particular sender, while 47 percent believed it would automatically unsubscribe them from a mailing list. Some 21 percent of respondents thought a “report spam” feature would let the sender know they didn’t like the message, so the sender could “do a better job mailing me” in the future.

“Spam complaints are the primary metric that ISPs use to determine email delivery. This study shows that consumers don’t really understand how the complaint system works and that mailers don’t understand how consumers define spam,” said MarketingSherpa’s research director Stefan Tornquist, in a statement.

Geoff Duncan
Former Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
I went looking for the best Prime Day bargains on Google hardware, and these are the winners
Prime Day discounts are hitting everything from Pixel phones to Nest cameras and the Pixel Watch 4. After digging through the listings, these are the deals that stood out the most.
Google Pixel 10 vs Pixel 10 Pro

Some Prime Day deals feel like discounts in name only, but after digging through this year's sale, I found a few Google deals that are genuinely worth your attention. Several Pixel 10 models are seeing triple-digit price cuts, the Pixel 10 Pro Fold is at its lowest price yet, and a few Nest products are available at prices that are actually hard to ignore. Whether you're looking for a new smartphone, smartwatch, streaming device, or smart home upgrade, these are the Google deals I'd recommend before Prime Day wraps up on June 26.

Pixel 10a

Read more
This Prime Day, Sylvox Is Offering Up To 28% Off Its Frameless Outdoor TVs
Sylvox's Prime Day sale offers discounts of up to 28% across its outdoor TV lineup, including the Frameless Series, Deck Pro 3.0, and Cinema Series.
Indoors, Interior Design, Appliance

Prime Day is often associated with upgrading devices inside the home, but some of the most interesting deals this year are focused on the spaces outside it. From June 23 to June 26, Sylvox is offering discounts of up to 28% on its Frameless Series Outdoor TVs, bringing down the cost of a category that has become increasingly relevant as homeowners invest more in their outdoor living spaces.

The timing reflects a broader shift in how backyards, patios, and decks are being used. What were once occasional gathering spots are increasingly functioning as extensions of the home, doubling up as entertainment areas, outdoor dining spaces, and even wellness zones. As these spaces evolve, homeowners are paying closer attention to the products they bring into them—not just in terms of performance, but also how they fit into the overall design.

Read more
This modular robot mower handles up to 6 acres, and it’s over $1,000 off for Prime Day
YARBO Robot Lawn Mower Pro drops to $4,734 (save 21%) this Prime Day: wire-free RTK navigation, AI vision, 6-acre coverage, and a modular all-season design.
Robot lawn mover against a green-yellow background

This post is brought to you in paid partnership with YARBO.

If you've been pricing out a robot mower for a genuinely large property, Prime Day just made the math easier. The YARBO Robot Lawn Mower Pro is down to $4,734 on Amazon (from a $5,999 list price), a huge Prime Day savings on a machine built for yards most robot mowers can't touch. At that price and that capability, this is the kind of purchase that changes how an entire weekend gets spent, and the RTK and AI vision navigation underneath means there's no perimeter wire to bury, which is the install headache that defines most of the category.

Read more