I've had another 'phishing' message which I haven't opened as I don't do on
line banking. Since i last enquired I have discovered why I have been
unable to forward messages. So now I can wuold whover sent a couple of
addresses for such things please send them again.
Patricia in Wales
On 3/17/10 2:07 AM, scotl...@aol.com wrote:
So now I can wuold whover sent a couple of addresses for
such things please send them again.
Every service provider has its own address for reporting
spam -- Comcast uses missed-s...@comcast.net, for example --
but abuse@ is common enough that
Thanks, Joy, for that advice. I have sent it to spam@ but someone in the
UK sent me a general UK address, I think to do with the abuse of the
internet in general.
Patricia in Wales
scotl...@aol.com
To unsubscribe send email to majord...@arachne.com containing the line:
unsubscribe
Advice is needed - or confirmation. I have received a message from aol
which I think is spam.
I have been told that my aol account needs to be updated if I want to
continue with my aol account.
The details requested - full name and address, date of birth, mother's
maiden name, card
Does it give an update number? You could google that just to double
check. Or you could check the AOL website for current updates
jenny
Scotland
On 7 Mar 2010, at 14:40, scotl...@aol.com wrote:
Advice is needed - or confirmation. I have received a message from
aol
which I think is spam.
I've investigated further and found I can access my email etc via this
link. Is this possible for someone else to set up?
also, there is a box asking for my Screen name and password but alongside
this there is a message saying that aol will never ask for screen name and
password online.
Is there some way you can forward the email to some help entity at aol,
which is outside of the links within the email to inquire about it?
Devon
In a message dated 3/7/2010 9:41:30 A.M. Eastern Standard Time,
scotl...@aol.com writes:
Advice is needed - or confirmation. I have received
I would consider that this is spam from beginning to end. You should delete
it immediately and do not reply to it in any way, shape or form.
If you need to verify anything with aol do it outside of the e-mail and do not
click on any of the links it gives you. It may be too late for this
...@aol.com
Sent: Sunday 07 March 2010 14:41
To: lace-chat@arachne.com
Subject: [lace-chat] Spam?
Advice is needed - or confirmation. I have received a
message from aol
which I think is spam.
I have been told that my aol account needs to be updated if I
want to
continue with my aol
On 3/7/10 9:40 AM, scotl...@aol.com wrote:
Advice is needed - or confirmation. I have received a message from aol
which I think is spam.
I have been told that my aol account needs to be updated if I want to
continue with my aol account.
The details requested - full name and address,
Suddenly I have been receiving a lot of spam/ phising / scam e-mails where I
have won a lot of money in the British lottery, the Yahoo lottery and a
Windows lottery - without ever buying a ticket or entering any lottery. The
Yahoo lottery asks for proof of valuable identity!!! Winning all that
You should never reply to these things AT ALL! It let the spammer know
they have a live address and you'll never see the end of junk you receive.
jeanette wrote:
Suddenly I have been receiving a lot of spam/ phising / scam e-mails where I
have won a lot of money in the British lottery, the
There is a long article in the current Computeractive magazine on how
email addresses are harvested, keeping spam out of your inbox and what can
be done to stop it being sent in the first place eg Spamcop. Part of the
article is:
The Privacy and Electronic Communications Regulations state
On Tue, 18 Sep 2007, Jean Nathan wrote:
So I was wrong in thinking that it was illegal to send spam in the USA, it
isn't - it's actually illegal in the EU, which explains why so little of it
in my inbox shows an EU originating address.
The hacker originating in the EU can hide that too :(
If winning elections means I'm gonna get tripple the amount of spam
every day, I think I want a recount (an be d...d to the increased faith
in the economy under the new umbrella)
--
Tamara P Duvallhttp://t-n-lace.net/
Lexington, Virginia, USA (Formerly of Warsaw,
There's a big problem with telephone diallers installing themselves and then
dialling premium rate numbers without the peple knowing. They're getting
phone bills for amounts ranging from over GBP100 to as much as GBP900.
Apparently these programs can dial even when the computer's switched off, I
A friend of mine got caught with that one, apart from the unexpected
bill they had a lot of trouble getting the spam dialler uninstalled
from the computer.
As I understand it, always-on/broadband connections don't (as yet!) get
affected by this one because they don't dial out each time.
I gave up when I was getting 70-80 porn type spams a day and changed my
email. I have several addresses I use but it was surprisingly easy to change
my main address and let people know. Since then (with an email address
without part of a 'name' in it) I have had hardly any spam at all. This is
Unfortunately I can't get at yesterday's 'Working Lunch' programme on the
BBC website, but I'm certain that the ICSTIS regulator said that broadband
was now being hit by these diallers, but can't remember the details of how
the fraudsters did it. It's really annoying when the archive for these
Tamara,
The porn spam just downloads itself.
I delete any mail that comes that I can't identify - or that I identify as
spam, but this other stuff just appears.
Yesterday one even installed itelf. I was able to un-install it without
opening it, but it is very annoying.
I have a fire wall, and
Seems that the spam I recieved was common to Australian, Victorian
lacemakers, hmmm very interesing.
Cheers, Yvonne.
- Original Message -
From: Avital [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Lace-Chat [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, June 11, 2004 4:13 PM
Subject: Re: [lace-chat] Spam
Yvonne and others
Yvonne and others,
Does your address appear on any Web pages? One of my addresses, my old
university address, was grabbed by spammers from LaRae's Locate-a-Lacemaker
page. I didn't know it was there as a clickable link (those are very easy
for spammers to grab automatically), but when I found it
I got it too, Yvonne. Looks like we've given someone our email adresses
with a threads slant and they sold the list. Maybe somewhere at one of
the Stitches and craft shows?
I didn't mind very much as it's textiles related, but I hope it's not the
first one of a series!! Nicer than the usual kind,
Tamara wrote:
That's what my there ought
to be... was supposed to mean. Somewhere in *her* system, not in mine.
Because we use Outlook Express, all the spam emails are delivered into out
in box and just labelled as spam. It's up to us what we do with them. If we
used Freeserve's other system
My ISP is applying an intelligent spam filter to emails. Fortunately all
emails are still downloaded to our in box but with
*** SPAM ***
added to the front of the subject line to those the filter identifies as
spam.
So far it's identified three lace-chat messages and a personal one from Clay
as
At 11:01 AM 4/20/2004, you wrote:
My ISP is applying an intelligent spam filter to emails. Fortunately all
emails are still downloaded to our in box but with
*** SPAM ***
added to the front of the subject line to those the filter identifies as
spam.
So far it's identified three lace-chat messages
26 matches
Mail list logo