Hi Jan,

To assume that you don't have to worry about viruses because you're on a Mac
is asking for trouble.  Just because most viruses are written for Windows
doesn't mean that some enterprising virus writer isn't targeting Macs at
this very minute, and the likelihood of this happening increases with the
growing popularity of the platform.  Get yourself a good virus protection
program and set up a schedule to update the latest virus definitions
regularly.

The message you received sounds like a typical virus message (I get them all
the time although this particular wording is new to me).  I searched the
Symantec site (they make Norton AntiVirus) under "a new game" and the
closest match was at this URL:
<http://securityresponse.symantec.com/avcenter/venc/data/w32.dexter.html>
It doesn't sound the same as what you received, however.  Chances are this
is a Windows virus that won't hurt you (or others).  I'm sure someone else
out there will know more about it than I do.

Good luck,

Beth


On 3/31/02 5:26 PM, "Jan Martel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> I'd always taken the position that the easiest thing to do about SPAM is to
> delete it and that email virurses (virii?) needn't concern me because I have
> a Mac. Recently, I've tried to be a little more pro-active about Spam and
> have taken to writing to abuse@ the sender's ISP to ask them to stop it. But
> today something happened that has me worried and I just thought I'd ask if
> anyone else has seen anything like it. I received what looked to me like
> Spam this morning - it purportedly came from a really weird email address
> [EMAIL PROTECTED], the subject was A new Game and the body of the email
> was:
> Hi,This is a very  new game
> This game is my first work.
> You're the first player.
> I expect you would like it.
> 
> There were two attachments, one called Snoopy.exe and one called
> TN_3430(1).jpeg. Following my new procedure, I checked the internet headers
> and discovered that the sender was supposedly at AOL. So I copied the
> message and headers and sent it to abuse@AOL with a nice note asking them to
> do something about it. I haven't yet heard back from them.
> 
> But, what has me worried, a few minutes ago I received a standard-looking
> "Returned mail; User Unknown" message from AOL. The message it was returning
> was one I had not sent, and was addressed to an address I'd never heard of.
> Entourage doesn't think I've sent any messages with the subject shown or the
> addressee. The message's subject was "Arial, Helvetica" and it also had a
> couple of attachments although neither was an exe. When I looked at the full
> internet headers on the message I had supposedly sent, one of them was
> exactly the same as one on the message I received earlier
> (rly-ip01.mx.aol.com). Should I be worrying about this? Has my email account
> been taken over by aliens? I've already sent copies of the messages to AOL
> and to Earthlink (my ISP). Should I do anything else?


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