Considering I get spam from large U.S. companies because they believed someone else when they used my email to sign up for something, I am inclined to agree with you. No matter how many times I click "mark as spam" in Gmail, it always gets delivered to my inbox.
Credit Karma is the biggest offender off the top of my head. For a company in the consumer datamining business, they sure aren't doing a good job.
Well, I got most of the Zendesk inbox-bombing emails into SPAM in Gmail.
All support[at]<company>.zendesk.com were flagged, none of them reached the Inbox.
Most of whatever[at]company.tld were flagged also. I think only Headspace and another that I don't remember got to my inbox. There were some automatic SPAM flags using custom domains that are more or less known: Tinder, Squarespace, TED, ...
So I guess currently their reputation is messed up.
Considering I get spam from large U.S. companies because they believed someone else when they used my email to sign up for something, I am inclined to agree with you. No matter how many times I click "mark as spam" in Gmail, it always gets delivered to my inbox.
Credit Karma is the biggest offender off the top of my head. For a company in the consumer datamining business, they sure aren't doing a good job.
You know them off the top of your head - because they reached you in your inbox - and other places.
It sounds like they’re crushing their goal, actually.
Two of the biggest spammers in the world are Salesforce and Hubspot. They should both be blacklisted yet most of their email goes into the inbox.
Well, I got most of the Zendesk inbox-bombing emails into SPAM in Gmail.
All support[at]<company>.zendesk.com were flagged, none of them reached the Inbox.
Most of whatever[at]company.tld were flagged also. I think only Headspace and another that I don't remember got to my inbox. There were some automatic SPAM flags using custom domains that are more or less known: Tinder, Squarespace, TED, ...
So I guess currently their reputation is messed up.