Reading Email Messages
Mweb Webmail displays whether you have unread email in your inbox, or in any folders, even shared folders, in a number of different ways.
To view the contents of a message, simply click the desired message, and it will open in the Preview Pane. You can also double-click the message, and it will open in a separate pop-up window. If you do NOT have a Preview Pane showing for your messages, double-clicking the message is the only way to open it and read its contents.
In general, the following options are available when viewing a message, either within the webmail interface or when it's been popped out into a separate window:
When viewing messages in the content pane (as opposed to them being popped out in their own window), other options are available:
Next to the sender's name and/or address is the Sender Verification Shield. By default, Mweb Webmail checks a number of things to attempt to validate that the sender is who they say they are. Things like DMARC, DKIM, SPF, trusted sender status, whether the user is authenticated on the server, and whether they're listed in your Contacts are all used to verify that Tom@Business-A.org, for example, Is actually Tom from Business-A.org. Moving your mouse over the shield opens a window that tells you whether the sender is likely the sender or not, and what checks were performed and their status.
The shield is color coded based on the sender's validity score:
Now, this simply attempts to validate the sender. It's no indication that the person sending the message is doing so with bad intent or that the message itself is okay. It is an indication of the status of the sending server and the sender's address. Things like improperly configured or missing DKIM and/or SPF records can lead to a red shield. In addition, even if a sender displays a green shield, it doesn't mean the message is NOT spam.
The Sender Verification Shield is just another tool at a user's disposal, hopefully letting them know to take extra care when clicking links or downloading an attachment from an email from a suspect sender.
External content is considered to be any image, video, animated gif, etc. that has an external source and is contained in an email. When remote content is included in an email, that content is hidden by default and must be manually displayed. The good news is, you can either view the content in that one message, or you can allow content from the sender so future emails won't show any warning.
To view external content, click on the Show images or always show images from this sender text that appears at the top of the email message. Once you do this, the remote content will be displayed on that email going forward. Clicking on "always show images from this sender" will add an exception for that email address to the "Allow Inline Images From" list, which is found on the Webmail card in your Account settings. When an exception has been made for an email address, emails from that sender will display all remote content automatically.
To bypass this step, and allow remote content to be automatically displayed from all senders and sources, simply enable the Show images from external websites setting that appears as a toggle on the Webmail card in your Account settings.
Messages that are from outside senders, especially messages that are potentially unsolicited, are advertisements, are newsletters, or are of a kind where the footer of the message offers recipients a way to unsubscribe from them will include a more obvious "Unsubscribe" button in the message's header.
Clicking this button essentially automates the unsubscribe process for the recipient. This saves them from having to hunt down the unsubscribe link(s), clicking them, navigating through the various questions asked, confirmation of the unsubscribe request, etc. and simply ensures that the unsubscribe request is sent. Once clicked, a green toast notification appears confirming that the unsubscribe request was sent.
Email trackers are generally small, transparent images that are embedded into a message for the sole purpose of knowing when a message is opened by a recipient. The idea is that, if there is a "hit" on that image, it was downloaded by the user when the email was opened. However, not everyone wants to be "tracked" like this. By default, Mweb Webmail will block all trackers for convenience. If a message does include an email tracker, text is displayed at the top of the message letting the user know. Users can click on that message and see who the tracker is from (e.g., Salesforce) and, if they so desire, accept the tracker for that message.
If a message has any attachments, a paperclip will display in the Messages List for that message. In addition, the message itself will show a small icon in the message header with text that tells you how many attachments there are. For example, "2 Attachments are included with this email." Clicking on the linked text will open a modal window that displays the file name(s) of the attachment(s) as well as the file size of each. It also displays, where possible, a preview of the attachment as an icon. Generally, this will only happen when an attachment is an image file. Other file types will display a more generic icon. Attachments are downloaded individually by simply clicking on the attachment. However, it is also possible to download all attachments in one convenient ZIP file.
It's worth noting that there may be instances where there is no paperclip displayed for a message in the message list, but text on a message itself noting that attachments are present. Generally, this happens with messages that have embedded images, such as images that are pasted into a message, logos and/or icons that are part of a sender's signature, etc. These are NOT displayed in the messages list as these are so common that virtually every message in a user's inbox would have an attachment icon on it, thereby diminishing its effectiveness. In addition, when filtering messages in a folder by "attachment", these types of messages are not included.
©Mweb (Pty) Ltd. All rights reserved.