I received an email this morning concerning the subject; it includes links to a webpage and directs me to go there to verify my email address based on the statement that “since you recently changed your email address, we require you to blah, blah.”
Is this for real? Because I didn’t recently change my email address. I’ve had the same email address for years.
If you want me to cut and paste the message, I’ll be glad to.
Please send me the whole thing, including the headers if you can.
It’s some sort of phishing situation – you DO get an email if you have changed your email address or password but you can’t access your account unless/until you’ve triggered the url in the email. And you would know if you had changed your email address or your password.
No, please, we need the entire email. We especially need the header information – it’s probably all fake info but there’s a slight chance there’s a clue there that we can investigate and maybe find out who it is.
Are you sure? The headers you quoted can all be faked…sorry I am tired now, but the very first sent from IP address I forget teh actual header, sorry) should be from your ip address. That is the only one you can trust to be generated by your mail server. Everything else is fakeable.
While I assumed Tuba checked that before she would say it was real, you are right that it’s easy to pre- or postdate emails. I wonder if people were just naive enough to think that no one would fake it, or if they thought the protocol would be upgraded before it was a problem, ala the Y2K bug.
Who the heck thought that some day everyone and their dog would be using the internet to send electronic mail? In 1990, a common expectation was that the full-on GUI applications like CompuServe and America Online were going to push “university” implementations of networks (and their software standards and protocols) aside. As home users, it was easy to get online with CS or AOL (or Prodigy, GEnie, etc etc) but for the most part if you wanted the literal actual no-kidding internet you needed Kermit or a similar terminal program to connect to your college’s mainframe. Then you’d be typing arcane commands at the command line.
There was no world wide web, or at least not that any of us had heard of. And when we did see it, it was plain text with links you clicked on that took you elsewhere, no search engines to find things… AOL and CS and etc had icons, they weren’t all text-based, you didn’t have to know geeky things like bang paths and line feeds and how to BinHex or UUEncode your file attachment then FTP it as a 7 bit ASCII string and append it to your email message body from the mainframe’s command line.
I have no idea why it showed up in my IN box but it did. Is there a chance that it was accidentally re-sent on your end?
That email address is the only one I use and I check it daily. Mail that I want to keep goes into folders; junk main and/or republican glurge gets deleted as do all the sickening xmassy stuff I’m flooded with.
I have no answer.
I didn’t notice the date. Oh, well, another senior moment goes by. I think the senior moments are lining up and waiting for a chance; more and more of them are beginning to happen.
My ex-Darling Marcie, when she was about fourteen, ran away from home with a couple of other girls. That town in PA where the groundhog lives was as far as they got before running out of money. They checked into a hotel and the hotel, of course, called the cops; the cops called her father, and that was the end of the runaway----I still smile when I’m reminded of the groundhog----I can’t begin to spell the name of the town and it doesn’t matter anyway.
Many years ago, we had a problem with a mail server that would occasionally spool an incoming message and would then forget about it. Since most incoming messages actually reached their destination, no one really knew it was having a problem until many months later, when it finally completely filled up its disk and promptly crashed. Once they got it sorted out, all of the spooled messages were finally delivered. Hundreds and hundreds of e-mail messages, many of them several months old, all went out in one day.
The sysadmins did at least send out an explanation first before flooding everyone’s inbox with old undelivered e-mails.