That may not be the case. It is possible that someone simply dictionaried the address. Basically, some spammers just send combinations of letters and numbers to a domain name and hope they get an active email address. That has happened to me, so it is possible EyeBuyDirect isn't the culprit.
RedStickHam On Aug 19, 6:24 pm, Kirill <[email protected]> wrote: > I use a separate email addresses for each merchant I use, so it is > easy to track who sells my info to unscrupulous third parties (or who > gets hacked). Recently I got the following virus-laden e-mail sent to > an e-mail address I used only with EyeBuyDirect: > > ----- > Please open the attached document. It was scanned and sent to you > using a Xerox > WorkCentre Pro. > > Sent by: Guest > Number of Images: 1 > Attachment File Type: ZIP [DOC] > > WorkCentre Pro Location: machine location not set > Device Name: XRX8872AA7ACDB47050410 > > For more information on Xerox products and solutions, please > visithttp://www.xerox.com > ---- > > I would think twice about dealing with a company tha sells your info > to scammers or has lax enough security that your e-mail address is > accessible to scammers. > > Kirill -- Check us out at the oft-updated http://glassyeyes.blogspot.com! You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "GlassyEyes" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected] To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected] For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/glassyeyes?hl=en
