Trouble with Email
Thread Starter
Stargazing

Joined: Apr 2006
Posts: 430
Likes: 0
From: West
Trouble with Email
A query for the computer experts - over the past couple of days I've noticed a very large number of 'failed delivery' emails to one of my email addresses referring to emails I haven't sent - looking at the details it all seems to be spam. Could someone be hijacking my puter/email address? I have Spamfighter, an AVG security suite, and Spyfighter, which run daily sweeps.
Joined: Feb 2000
Posts: 542
Likes: 0
From: asia
It's a virus Jim, but not on your machine!!!
(apologies to the good Captain K)
It is probably a virus infecting the machine of someone who has you in their address book. The virus is then trying to replicate by sending out emails, and picking a random name from the address book to "spoof" as the sender.
So you did not send out the mails, but you get the failure messages.
Sometimes you can track the IP of the sender from the failure notice.
It is probably a virus infecting the machine of someone who has you in their address book. The virus is then trying to replicate by sending out emails, and picking a random name from the address book to "spoof" as the sender.
So you did not send out the mails, but you get the failure messages.
Sometimes you can track the IP of the sender from the failure notice.
Official PPRuNe Chaplain
Joined: Apr 2001
Posts: 3,498
Likes: 0
From: Witnesham, Suffolk
It's worth tracking the origin of the spoofs if you can - you may be able to alert a friend to the fact he has the virus.
I've spent a fair amount of time educating a delightful but unworldly archdeacon about the virus he had, how he got it, and how he was spreading it.
I've spent a fair amount of time educating a delightful but unworldly archdeacon about the virus he had, how he got it, and how he was spreading it.
Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 174
Likes: 0
From: Over the hill and far away
Spammers
often use genuine email addresses in the 'From:' field of an email in a bid to beat the (mainly useless) spam traps that some ISPs run their incoming emails through.
When I was admin of a relatively small mail server a few years ago, I got more bounced emails telling me an address to which someone from my domain had tried to send an email, didn't exist, than I did actual spam emails. Needless to say, the address at my domain had sent no such emails.
There are two options, 1. bounce the bounce emails back to the admin of the server that sent them to you, or 2. (my favored method), delete them and forget about them.
The chance of someone hijacking your computer to send emails is a possibilty, but if you have a decent firewall, it's a rare possibilty.
often use genuine email addresses in the 'From:' field of an email in a bid to beat the (mainly useless) spam traps that some ISPs run their incoming emails through.When I was admin of a relatively small mail server a few years ago, I got more bounced emails telling me an address to which someone from my domain had tried to send an email, didn't exist, than I did actual spam emails. Needless to say, the address at my domain had sent no such emails.
There are two options, 1. bounce the bounce emails back to the admin of the server that sent them to you, or 2. (my favored method), delete them and forget about them.
The chance of someone hijacking your computer to send emails is a possibilty, but if you have a decent firewall, it's a rare possibilty.
Per Ardua ad Astraeus
Joined: Mar 2000
Posts: 18,575
Likes: 4
From: UK
Originally Posted by Keef
a delightful but unworldly archdeacon about the virus he had, how he got it, and how he was spreading it.




