My e-mail adress spammed itself?
My e-mail adress spammed itself?
I have multiple e-mail accounts, and one of them is YahooMail..... Today I went to check my mail, and noticed that my Bulk (spam) folder received few new mails, and I decided to check them before deletion. But when I saw that one of that mails was actually sent from my own yahoo address I couldn't believe (my surprise was even greater when I saw subject of that mail -> MensHealth ID....WTF, I don't read that quasi-journalism)..... I regulary scan my HDD for viruses and spyware, I never used that mail adress for anything than coresponding with my friends, and that mail adress wasn't "published" on any website. Did anyone had similar experience? And can anyone explain how is this possible? Thanks
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rkawakami
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One likely scenario...
one of your friend's system was infected with malware and read their address book. Then the computer was used as a mail bot and sent out the spam, faking the sent address as yours. If you check the email headers it might be possible to figure out where it actually came from. Although I'm no email expert, this is what I've done before:
Plug the IP address in the "X-Originating-IP:" line into this site: http://www.ip2location.com/ If it really was sent by a Yahoo account it should resolve to the yahoo.com domain.
Plug the IP address in the "Received:" line into ip2location and see if it resolves to your ISP.
Of course email headers can be faked/spoofed so this might not be a sure bet, but if the IP addresses don't match what you know to be true, then there's a good chance that your system is fine.
one of your friend's system was infected with malware and read their address book. Then the computer was used as a mail bot and sent out the spam, faking the sent address as yours. If you check the email headers it might be possible to figure out where it actually came from. Although I'm no email expert, this is what I've done before:
Plug the IP address in the "X-Originating-IP:" line into this site: http://www.ip2location.com/ If it really was sent by a Yahoo account it should resolve to the yahoo.com domain.
Plug the IP address in the "Received:" line into ip2location and see if it resolves to your ISP.
Of course email headers can be faked/spoofed so this might not be a sure bet, but if the IP addresses don't match what you know to be true, then there's a good chance that your system is fine.
Ray Kawakami
X22 X24 X31 X41 X41T X60 X60s X61 X61s X200 X200s X300 X301 Z60m Z61t Z61p 560 560Z 600 600E 600X T21 T22 T23 T41 T60p T410 T420 T520 W500 W520 R50 A21p A22p A31 A31p
NOTE: All links to PC-Doctor software hosted by me are dead. Files removed 8/28/12 by manufacturer's demand.
X22 X24 X31 X41 X41T X60 X60s X61 X61s X200 X200s X300 X301 Z60m Z61t Z61p 560 560Z 600 600E 600X T21 T22 T23 T41 T60p T410 T420 T520 W500 W520 R50 A21p A22p A31 A31p
NOTE: All links to PC-Doctor software hosted by me are dead. Files removed 8/28/12 by manufacturer's demand.
Timely post, Ray. I will have to check out your link.
This week has been problematic for me. My inbox is being filled with undeliverable email messages - all from Spam. So far this week over 250 such messages have appeared in my inbox.
I have verified that these messages did not originate from my computer. For one thing, they were created using Outlook. I use the SeaMonkey email client. Although have Outlook 2003 on my computer, I have never gone through the setup wizard. I just verified this again, to be sure. Secondly, I use an Authenticated SMTP email server which requires that I enter my password before a message can be sent. Finally, I performed a full virus scan with up-to-date Kaspersky Internet Security 7, and I performed a full Spybot scan using the latest updated version. I came up clean on both counts.
I did a little research on this and it appears that either someone elses computer has become an email zombie (what Ray was referring to above) or else a spammer randomly acquired my email address though trial and error. When someone uses an email address in this way for sending Spam, it results in something called "backscatter".
http://www.spamnation.info/notes/guides ... erFAQ.html
I am hoping that this problem will go away on it's own - otherwise I will probably be forced to abandon my long-used email address. I have contacted my isp (email provider) to see if they can do anything about this.
This week has been problematic for me. My inbox is being filled with undeliverable email messages - all from Spam. So far this week over 250 such messages have appeared in my inbox.
I have verified that these messages did not originate from my computer. For one thing, they were created using Outlook. I use the SeaMonkey email client. Although have Outlook 2003 on my computer, I have never gone through the setup wizard. I just verified this again, to be sure. Secondly, I use an Authenticated SMTP email server which requires that I enter my password before a message can be sent. Finally, I performed a full virus scan with up-to-date Kaspersky Internet Security 7, and I performed a full Spybot scan using the latest updated version. I came up clean on both counts.
I did a little research on this and it appears that either someone elses computer has become an email zombie (what Ray was referring to above) or else a spammer randomly acquired my email address though trial and error. When someone uses an email address in this way for sending Spam, it results in something called "backscatter".
http://www.spamnation.info/notes/guides ... erFAQ.html
I am hoping that this problem will go away on it's own - otherwise I will probably be forced to abandon my long-used email address. I have contacted my isp (email provider) to see if they can do anything about this.
DKB
I plugged several of the "X-Originating-IP:" addresses in, and they were each from a different place. Several were from different states in the US, one from Canada, and one from France. None that I saw were from my isp.rkawakami wrote:Plug the IP address in the "X-Originating-IP:" line into this site: http://www.ip2location.com/ If it really was sent by a Yahoo account it should resolve to the yahoo.com domain.
Plug the IP address in the "Received:" line into ip2location and see if it resolves to your ISP.
The "Received:" addresses matched the "X-Originating-IP:" addresses in the ones I checked.
DKB
This was helpful, turns out that most of information was faked (it says that i really sent it to myself), but X-Originating-IP traced to Lithuania, it seems that someone of my friends computers is really infected..... Thank you for posting.rkawakami wrote:Plug the IP address in the "X-Originating-IP:" line into this site: http://www.ip2location.com/ If it really was sent by a Yahoo account it should resolve to the yahoo.com domain.
If you have your own domain, one way to reduce the volume of this sort of thing is to have your domain host disable the "catch-all" feature that treats any email address on your domain as valid. Many domains are set up so that addresses like "you@you.com" or "me@you.com" or "anyone@you.com" will all be considered valid addresses by the email server and you'll see those messages in your in-box, even if you had only set up one address for yourself, let's say "joe@you.com." If you disable the catch-all feature, all emails to your domain will be blocked except for those to joe@you.com and postmaster@you.com.
My understanding is that spam robots will randomly fabricate email addresses and test them, rejecting any that bounce back. So if your catch-all feature isn't disabled, the spam robot will use spoofing to send thousands of spam messages from thousands of random addresses on your domain, and your in-box will be flooded with all the spam messages that get sent to inactive addresses and are returned as undeliverable. This happened to a colleague of mine; she was receiving more than 2,000 returned emails a day until we figured out what was going on.
I've been getting spam messages from my own address for many years, it's nothing to get worried about, and it's most likely not due to any virus. It's all done with spam robots spoofing your address.
My understanding is that spam robots will randomly fabricate email addresses and test them, rejecting any that bounce back. So if your catch-all feature isn't disabled, the spam robot will use spoofing to send thousands of spam messages from thousands of random addresses on your domain, and your in-box will be flooded with all the spam messages that get sent to inactive addresses and are returned as undeliverable. This happened to a colleague of mine; she was receiving more than 2,000 returned emails a day until we figured out what was going on.
I've been getting spam messages from my own address for many years, it's nothing to get worried about, and it's most likely not due to any virus. It's all done with spam robots spoofing your address.
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