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#1
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To all,
You're probably well aware that spammers and trolls employ frequent address changes or completely false email IDs and you may have given up all attempts to add them to your personal blocked senders list. Here's some tips which I hope prove to be of use in finding where it's coming from and how to stop it, with a minimum of effort. 1. Examining junkmail message headers without opening the email. Some spam email comes in HTML form and may contain executable applets. These range from irritating, but harmless, time-wasters, like fake virus alerts or 'launch IE over and over' infinite loops, which force a reboot and could cause you to lose any unsaved work. These scripts often attempt to exploit the user's Outlook Express 'preview pane' but most users are already well aware of the dangers and have deactivated that feature. Nevertheless, the applets will execute if sheer curiosity causes you to open the post conventionally. To get around this problem, in Outlook Express, RIGHT-click on a suspect email and, on the drop-down menu, select 'Properties'. You will first get a small dialog displaying the message headers. The From: line will show you what domain it originated on and whether or not the sender's name has been anonymized (eg ). I they're not willing to make themselves known then you're not going to be interested in what they have to say/sell. 2. If you're still convinced the email is benign and you REALLY want to see what you would be missing by deleting it.... Whilst in the Message Properties box, click the 'Message Source' button to see the email in text-only form. You can view any HTML codes within the message without risk of any applets being executed. You may also see long, meaningless blocks of seemingly random characters at the end of the source, particularly where there is an attachment. Whilst this may be benign, like embedded font information, it could equally be harmful executable code, such as a virus, trojan, or worm. Exit the views and delete the message. You may also wish to:- a) Exit Outlook Express and run your virus checker on your system. b) Download the FREEWARE "Stinger.EXE" from http://vil.nai.com/vil/stinger/ to detect and remove some of the recent headline-hitting nasties and their variants. c) Check Windows Update for your Operating System, Iinternet Explorer and Outlook Express versions for any emerging vulnerabilities in the 'message properties' dialog and fixes on offer. 3. Blocking the domain. Although the spammer may have successfully substituted some random characters for their username, you will note that the domain name is not similarly scrambled. The sender's ISP would not accept the message without this being valid. Sometimes a particular domain, or country of origin suffix is seen time and again. If none of your regular email contacts use these domains then you'll not be missing anything by blocking all output from it. Make a written note of it, or highlight everything after the '@' symbol, using the cursor and press CTRL-C, to copy it. Then, under [Tools Menu][Message Rules][Blocked Senders List][Add] type the domain name (no need to use the @ character) or CTRL-V to paste what you copied. Choose to block mail, news, or both and press OK. You can add more entries at this point, or click OK again, to back out of the Tools-Rules menu. 4. Trolls. This technique is also effective against newsgroup trolls, provided that all their multiple handles/email IDs all stem from the same domain, perhaps because they only have the one ISP account but adding more is no problem. 5. The recent email 'flood' The following email rules are currentlly routing virtually all the phoney "Microsoft Security pack" emails to my deleted items folder. 'Where the message has an attachment' Delete it 'Where the message size is over 80kb' Delete it To make sure that things like attached photos from your family or friends don't get zapped by these, create additional rules which select on the basis of their email IDs (you can specify multiple names per rule) and use the 'move the message to the specified folder' option (create one or more extra local folders to move them to first). Add the 'and stop processing more rules' option, save the rule, then move it up the rules list so that it is processed before the 'delete-anything-with-attachment' rule. (In case you were wondering, 'stop processing more rules' means 'don't apply further conditional tests to *this* message' or 'goto next incoming message and restart from Rule #1'). If in doubt, uncheck the tickboxes against the blanket-deletion rules and use the 'Apply Now' button in the rules menu (browse to and select Inbox to apply them to) after you've received mail, logged off, looked through your Inbox contents for attachments you were expecting and moved them to another folder. 6. The more joy of bulk-deletion. That's all there is to it. Only a few mouse-clicks difference between automatic and manual rule application. All that remains is to empty the deleted items folder and you're done. No more hitting the delete key hundreds of times over.... regards, Mark |
#2
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Many thanks for that Mark. Your email has gone straight into my Helpful
Advice folder! --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.521 / Virus Database: 319 - Release Date: 23/09/2003 |
#3
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Dear all,
c) Check Windows Update for your Operating System, Internet Explorer and Outlook Express versions for any emerging vulnerabilities in the 'message properties' dialog and fixes on offer. I should emphasize the importance of this precaution, now that this tip has 'gone public' though I admit that it will take a fair bit of trickery to exploit it, if it is a genuine vulnerability. -- regards, Mark |
#4
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In ,
Quilljar wrote: Many thanks for that Mark. Your email has gone straight into my Helpful Advice folder! Glad to be of help. I've seen your name before but can't remember where. Hi anyway. -- regards, Mark |
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