sounds like you hit the nail on the head there nutcase
Okay, here's the sitch.. (alright, I admit it, I watch Kim Possible on occasion.)
At the company where I am the de facto IT manager, we gave the boss a new email address about 6 months ago (by adding the middle initial to the typical first initial, lastname @yourcompany formula) because she was getting several hundred spam a day.
Now, su iously to me, her new address is starting to follow the same pattern. I know she doesn't get on the net and pass her name around, and we keep up to date with security stuff (for the most part), so I'm at a loss to explain why her new address is getting spammed so much. In comparison, none of the other addresses we use get even a fraction of the volume hers does.
One thing to note, around the end of last year there was a rather acrimonious dissolution of the business partnership, and her former partner has shown a pattern of small pettiness. In addition, several of the spams address the boss with a derivative of her name that the former partner would use occasionally, that seemed to irritate the boss.
Can anyone give me a plausible explanation for the superabundance of spam to the new address that doesn't include a former friend just sticking her address in response to a bunch of junk mail ads? I hate to be su ious like this, but I haven't been able to come up with a more satisfying explanation.
sounds like you hit the nail on the head there nutcase
Thanks for your input... and for the term of endearment... somebody cares. (sniff)
I'm going to state the obvious here but these are the main reasons for getting on SPAM lists (beside answering SPAMs or registering at shady websites):
1.- Being in the address book of an infected/corrupt PC (could be the PC of your best friend)
2.- Participating in mailing lists (receiving/posting) - it is quite easy for spybots to extract email addresses from such lists
3.- Posting on forums (most forums require a valid email and a lot of them do not protect it well)
4.- Publishing e-mail on websites (i.e. contact info on company website)
If none of these apply to her then maybe your line of thought is correct. I would personnaly bet on number 1.
Hope this helps.
Hmm... our company website is mostly dead, but I checked it... there's an address there that never gets a hit.
Forums... I doubt she goes there.
Mailing lists for healthcare is a small possibility... but again, others here are on similar lists, and no one else gets near the volume.
I reinstalled Norton Internet security on her computer recently, maybe I need to run a few other spyware checks to be on the safe side.
Thanks.
That happened to me when I got to school as a freshman at my university. I had no idea how they got my address (pre facebook, my space, etc) and I didn't even konw it until I registered)/ There was no way to explain it. I went and ed to the "Help Desk" who were as clueless as I was. All I could do was unsubscribe to all e-mails I was getting. It also sounded like her, I was one of the few people that was getting a lot of e-mails (200 + a day). By law, all those types of e-mails she is getting have to have an unsubscribe link, which she should probably (probably, but if there aren't then I wouldn't know what to do) click and unsubscribe. Most likely it's one large company that has a large grouping of mass lists and once you find that one they'll stop. That's how it stopped for me.
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