[Dixielandjazz] What's this about?

Daniel Augustine ds.augustine at mail.utexas.edu
Sun Jan 25 11:35:28 PST 2009


DJML--
     The email-address "evidence at otelco.net" belongs to Dave Gannett,  
whose website may be just trying to add you to its list of approved  
senders.  I'm sure nothing malicious is intended (right, Dave?).

     Dan
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: Don Kirkman <donsno2 at charter.net>
Date: January 25, 2009 1:10:36 PM CST
To: ds.augustine at mail.utexas.edu
Cc: Dixieland Jazz Mailing List <dixielandjazz at ml.islandnet.com>
Subject: Re: [Dixielandjazz] What's this about?

On Sun, 25 Jan 2009 17:36:40 -0000, Ken Mathieson wrote:

> I got the mail below and an identical one (timed at the same time)  
> ostensibly in connection with a posting I had made to the list. As  
> you can see, the sender made no attempt to identify himself, so I  
> haven't responded to the invitation to reply, I've treated both  
> mails as potentially malicious and zapped them. It could be  
> perfectly genuine, in which case the sender should have identified  
> him/herself. Alternatively, the list might be being used to  
> propagate spam.

> Here's the message:

> Hello,
> You've just sent your first email to me since I've installed Bsafe  
> Online's spam killer. For this first time only, please help me add  
> your email address to my approved sender list.
> Simply reply to this email with the following code in the subject  
> line of your reply.

> 158ccf23

> Thanks for your help!
> evidence at otelco.net

Hopefully you'll get more detailed information than I can give, but
this may be a "phishing" message.  The hook is to tell the recipient
something that seems plausible but unverifiable, and entice him into
providing his real email address which is then used to send spam or
other unwanted messages while putting the blame on the innocent
victim.

Another less likely possibility is that someone has already captured
your email address and is using it to send messages in your name.

I tried some of the standard methods of tracing messages but didn't
find anything that might lead to the culprit.

The first thing to do is to scan the message for viruses or trojans to
be sure it isn't infecting your system, and then deal with it by
deleting or ignoring it.
-- 
Don Kirkman
donsno2 at charter.net

**--------------------------------------------------------------------**
**  Dan Augustine  --  Austin, Texas  --  ds.augustine at mail.utexas.edu
**     "I always keep a supply of stimulant handy in case I see a
**      snake, which I also keep handy." -- W. C. Fields
**--------------------------------------------------------------------**




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