Most messages come from a newsletter signup, a shared mailing list, or a spoofed sender name—check the real sending domain, then unsubscribe, block, and report.
You open your inbox and there it is again: “The Daily Horn.” Maybe it looks like a newsletter. Maybe it looks like a deal alert. Maybe it’s a messy blob of links that screams spam. Either way, it’s annoying, and it can feel sketchy when you don’t recall signing up.
Here’s the good news: you can usually figure out why it’s happening in a few minutes. Even better, you can stop it without clicking risky links or playing whack-a-mole forever.
What “The Daily Horn” Emails Usually Are
In most inboxes, emails like this fall into one of three buckets:
- A real mailing list you joined on purpose or by accident (often via a checkbox on a form).
- A marketing list your address landed on after a site you used shared or sold subscriber data.
- A spoofed brand name where the display name says “The Daily Horn,” but the real sender is something else.
The fix depends on which bucket you’re dealing with. So the first job is not “unsubscribe.” The first job is identify the real sender.
Start With A 60-Second Sender Check
Don’t trust the name you see in your inbox list. Email apps often show a friendly display name that can be faked. What you want is the actual address and domain that sent it.
Step 1: Expand The From Line
Open one of the messages and tap or click the sender name near the top. Most apps will reveal the full email address. Look at the part after the @ sign. That domain matters more than the name.
Step 2: Look For A Mismatch
If the message claims to be “The Daily Horn,” but the address is from a random domain, a misspelled domain, or a free mailbox address, treat it as suspicious. A real newsletter usually sends from a consistent domain and repeats it over time.
Step 3: Check Where Links Would Go (Without Clicking)
On desktop, hover over a link and look at the status bar preview. On mobile, long-press a link and preview the URL. If the destinations look unrelated, stuffed with tracking, or jump across weird domains, skip clicking and move straight to blocking and reporting.
Why Am I Getting Emails From The Daily Horn? Common Causes And Clues
Once you can see the real sender address, the pattern usually becomes clear. Below are the most common reasons this keeps showing up, plus what each one looks like when you inspect the message.
Accidental Signup On A Form
Newsletter opt-ins can sneak in during account creation, coupon popups, webinar registrations, giveaway entries, browser extensions, and app installs. Sometimes the checkbox is pre-checked. Sometimes the opt-in is bundled into “updates and offers.”
Your Address Was Added Through A Partner List
Some sites share subscriber data through “marketing partners.” That can put your address into multiple lists you never heard of. You’ll often notice a wave of new senders around the same time, not just one.
A List Was Scraped Or Leaked
If your email address appears on public pages (contact pages, PDFs, forum posts) it can get harvested. Data leaks also feed spam lists. In those cases, the sender may keep changing, even if the display name stays similar.
Spoofed Display Name
Spammers love display names because they’re easy to fake. If each message shows a different email address behind the same “The Daily Horn” name, you’re likely looking at spoofing or a rotating sender setup.
A Forwarding Rule Or Compromised Account
If these messages appear in multiple folders, show up as “read” unexpectedly, or get auto-archived, check rules and filters. If you see sends you didn’t make, treat it like account compromise and change your password right away.
Safe Actions That Stop The Emails Without Risky Clicks
There are three actions that are safe in almost every case: block, mark as spam, and report suspicious messages. Unsubscribing can be fine when the sender is clearly legitimate, yet it’s not the first move when you can’t confirm who’s behind the email.
Block The Sender Or Domain
Blocking is blunt, and that’s fine. If you confirm the sender address is consistent, block that address. If the sender changes addresses but stays on the same domain, block the whole domain where your email service supports it.
Mark Messages As Spam
Spam reporting trains your provider’s filters. Do this from your email client so the mailbox system learns, not just your eyes. After you report enough messages, many inboxes will auto-divert similar emails later.
Report Phishing When It’s Sketchy
If the email pushes password resets you didn’t request, urgent “account locked” warnings, fake invoices, crypto pitches, or “verify your identity” links, treat it as phishing. Gmail’s official guidance on spotting and reporting phishing is worth following step-by-step: Avoid & report phishing emails.
Unsubscribe Only After You Verify It’s A Real List
If the sender domain looks consistent and the content looks like a normal newsletter, using the built-in unsubscribe button in your email app is usually safer than clicking random links inside the message body. Built-in tools rely on email list headers that many legitimate senders include.
If you’re on Outlook, Microsoft’s own steps for blocking senders are clear and fast to follow: Block or unblock senders in Outlook.
Common “Daily Horn” Patterns And The Right Fix
This table is designed to help you choose the right move based on what you see when you inspect the sender and the message behavior. Use it like a decision sheet. No guessing needed.
| What You’re Seeing | Clues In The Message | What To Do Next |
|---|---|---|
| Same sender address every time | From line stays identical, domain looks consistent | Use built-in unsubscribe, then block if it keeps coming |
| Same display name, changing addresses | “The Daily Horn” name repeats, email address varies | Mark as spam, block each sender, report phishing if links feel off |
| Different domains, similar templates | Layout repeats, footer text changes, many tracking links | Report as spam repeatedly; consider a rule to move to Junk/Spam |
| Unsubscribe link looks weird | URL preview shows unrelated domains or odd paths | Skip clicking; use spam report and block instead |
| Message claims urgent account action | “Verify now,” “password expires,” “invoice due” pressure | Report phishing; do not sign in through the email |
| Appears after you installed an app/extension | Timing matches install date, new marketing mail spikes | Check app permissions and accounts you created; unsubscribe where legit |
| Lands in Inbox even after spam reports | Provider keeps letting it through | Create a filter/rule to auto-delete or send to Junk |
| Shows up as read or moved automatically | Status changes without you opening it | Audit filters, forwarding, and security settings; change password |
| You see your own address in “To” with many recipients | Bulk send behavior, mailing list feel, sometimes hidden recipients | Unsubscribe only if sender looks legitimate; otherwise spam report |
How To Stop The Emails In Gmail, Outlook, And Apple Mail
Most inboxes share the same building blocks: report spam, block the sender, and set a filter if messages slip through. The clicks differ a bit by platform, so this section keeps it practical.
Gmail On Desktop
- Open a message from the sender.
- Click the three-dot menu near the top-right of the message.
- Choose Report spam or Report phishing based on the content.
- Choose Block to stop future mail from that address.
If you confirm it’s a real newsletter, use Gmail’s built-in unsubscribe option when it appears near the sender name. That route is cleaner than chasing random links in the footer.
Gmail On Android Or iPhone
- Open the message.
- Tap the three-dot menu.
- Tap Report spam or Report phishing.
- Tap Block if the option is available for that sender.
Outlook On The Web (Outlook.com / Hotmail)
- Select the message.
- Mark it as Junk to train the filter.
- Add the sender address or domain to your blocked list in settings.
- If the same content keeps coming from new addresses, set a rule based on subject keywords or sender domain fragments.
Outlook Desktop App (Windows Or Mac)
- Right-click the message.
- Choose the junk or block sender option.
- Confirm the sender gets added to the blocked senders list.
Apple Mail (iPhone, iPad, Mac)
- Open the message and tap the sender to view details.
- Use Block Contact when it appears.
- Move messages to Junk so Apple’s filter learns the pattern.
- If you use iCloud Mail rules on Mac, create a rule that moves matching messages to Trash or Junk.
When Blocking Isn’t Enough: Filters That Catch The Stragglers
Some senders rotate addresses to dodge blocks. That’s where filters and rules earn their keep. You can match on subject lines, repeated phrases in the body, or consistent domains you see in the From address.
Filter Ideas That Work Well
- Subject contains: “Daily Horn” or recurring headline patterns.
- From contains: a consistent domain fragment you keep seeing.
- Has words: repeated footer text, unsubscribe boilerplate, or list IDs.
- Action: skip inbox, apply spam label, move to Junk, or delete.
Start conservative. Send to Spam/Junk first, then move to auto-delete once you’re sure you’re not catching something you actually want.
Quick Action Matrix By Goal
Use this as a tight checklist. Pick your goal, then follow the matching action in your mail app.
| Your Goal | Gmail | Outlook |
|---|---|---|
| Stop the sender fast | Block sender + report spam | Add to blocked senders + mark as junk |
| Train better filtering | Report spam on multiple messages | Mark as junk and review junk settings |
| Handle rotating addresses | Create filter using subject/body phrases | Create a rule to move matching messages to Junk |
| Deal with suspicious links | Report phishing, don’t click links | Report as phishing/junk, don’t click links |
| Clean up after accidental signup | Use built-in unsubscribe once verified | Use unsubscribe only after verifying sender domain |
| Check for account tampering | Review filters and forwarding; secure account | Review rules and forwarding; secure account |
Security Checks If The Emails Feel Personal Or Persistent
If “The Daily Horn” emails are paired with odd account activity, do a quick security sweep. This is worth doing if you notice password reset emails you didn’t request, sent mail you don’t recognize, or inbox rules you didn’t create.
Review Forwarding And Rules
Forwarding settings can quietly route mail to another address. Filters can auto-archive or mark messages read. If you see anything you didn’t set, remove it.
Change Your Password And Turn On Two-Step Verification
Use a strong, unique password. Then add two-step verification so a stolen password alone can’t unlock your account. This one step shuts down a lot of repeat spam problems tied to compromised logins.
Stop Using Email Links For Sign-Ins
If an email claims your account needs action, open a new browser tab and sign in by typing the real site address yourself or using a trusted bookmark. Don’t sign in through email buttons.
If You Want To Trace Where The Signup Came From
Sometimes you want to know what triggered the emails, not just stop them. You can often narrow it down with a little pattern matching:
- Timing: Did it start right after you created an account, installed an app, joined a giveaway, or entered an email on a new site?
- Inbox search: Search your mailbox for “confirm your subscription” or “welcome” near the date it started.
- Password manager clues: If you use a password manager, check for new logins created around the same time.
- Alias tracking: If you use email aliases (like plus addressing or masked emails), see which alias received it. That points to the source.
You won’t always get a clean answer, and that’s fine. The practical win is still the same: verify sender, block, report, then filter anything that slips through.
What To Avoid When You’re Trying To Stop These Emails
A few moves feel helpful but can backfire, especially when the sender is not a normal newsletter.
- Don’t reply to ask them to stop. Replies confirm your address is active.
- Don’t click random unsubscribe links when the sender looks sketchy. Use your email client’s built-in tools instead.
- Don’t download attachments from messages you didn’t expect.
- Don’t move one message at a time forever if the pattern repeats. Use rules and filters.
When It Stops, Keep It Stopped
After you block and report, give your mailbox a little time to learn. If you still see the same mail in your inbox after a few days, that’s your signal to add a filter that matches the subject line or repeated text patterns.
Once you’ve done the sender check and set the right control (unsubscribe for legit lists, spam/report for sketchy ones, filters for rotating senders), “The Daily Horn” emails usually fade out and stay gone.
References & Sources
- Google (Gmail Help).“Avoid & report phishing emails.”Steps for spotting phishing patterns and reporting suspicious messages in Gmail.
- Microsoft Support.“Block or unblock senders in Outlook.”Official instructions for blocking senders or domains and reducing unwanted mail in Outlook.
