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You can log into your email account with Web Mail and verify that the
messages are in your mail box only once, not multiple times.
If the email message is in your inbox only one time, but you are receiving
multiple copies, then your mail program must be downloading the same message
more than once (as opposed to the message being in your mail box more than one
time).
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A POP3 mail server, which you download your email from, does not decide which
pieces of mail you download. This is determined by your mail program (such as
Outlook or Outlook Express).
Here are four common reasons why you might receive duplicate email messages,
with brief explanations and resolutions. They are listed here in order of most
common to least common.
- If you have your e-mail client set to "leave messages on the server" then
Outlook has to remember what messages it has downloaded. The server does not
"remember" which message you downloaded, which is why you can download
messages at the office, leave them on the server and download them again at
home. If the server remembered which messages had been downloaded, then they
would not download again to another machine. Each instance of Outlook on
each machine must "remember" what it has already downloaded.
In order to remember which messages it has downloaded, Outlook keeps a list
of the "message IDs" for the messages it has downloaded. When it checks for
new messages, it gets a list of all the message IDs on the server, compares
it to the list or message IDs it has downloaded, and requests the messages
it does not have.
If the list of downloaded message IDs becomes corrupted, which is common
especially when that list gets long, Outlook will "lose track" and start downloading all messages over and over again.
RESOLUTION:
Un-check "leave messages on the server" and then "Send and
receive" to get the mailbox cleaned out. You
can then re-check it. We suggest you only leave messages on the server for 10 or
15 days, depending on your mail usage.
- An email message can get stuck in your inbox
on your server. This can cause your send / receive session to terminate
without updating your list of received messages, or without deleting
received messages from the server.
Messages can get stuck when; (a) they are corrupted or crafted to contain
special characters that cause your mail program to terminate, (b) large
messages take so long to send or receive that your mail program starts
another send / receive process before that last is completed, or (c) large
messages take so long to send or receive that you interrupt the process
before it's complete.
RESOLUTION: Log into your mail account with Web Mail
and move the messages in your inbox to a temporary folder. Then start
moving messages back to your inbox one or a few at a time, and
downloading them to Outlook until you find the message causing the
problem. Manage problem messages in Web Mail, and move them to a
temporary folder or delete them.
- Your e-mail client is automatically checking for new e-mail, too often. Some
users have their e-mail client set to check as frequently as every minute.
Checking more frequently than every 10 to 15 minutes can result in the next
check beginning before the last one has ended. When that happens, the index
file of the e-mail client will no longer be synchronized with the e-mail
server, resulting in multiple copies of the same message. Do the following
to correct his issue:
RESOLUTION: Change the setting of your e-mail client so
that it automatically checks for new e-mail no more frequently than
every 15 minutes. You can manually
force a check if needed, but be sure the last check has completely finished.
- Another e-mail client may be checking the your mailbox while the you are
checking it. There are hundreds of free/shareware/ActiveX controls/Java applets
that can check mailboxes for new messages. A quick check shows that ICQ, 3
different freeware utilities, AOL Instant Messenger, Yahoo and Netscape Notified
all start POP sessions to check for new mail. All could cause the same results
with either POP or IMAP or with mail left on the server. The best solution is
not to use these utilities. One can also cause the problem by using Web
Messaging while another e-mail client is logged in to the same mailbox.
RESOLUTION: Use only one program to check your mail box
ant any one time.
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