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Virus / Spyware Protection & Detection Got a bug? Losing control over your machines while funny viruses take their time eating them? Here's the cure. Post it to the world and learn ways to fix/prevent it in no time.

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Old 01-18-2007, 04:14 PM
hassen1 hassen1 is offline
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How can i be spamming myself?

The first time it happened, you were probably confused and even a bit curious, especially if you were not aware of this phenomenon of self-sent spam. A message appears in your e-mail inbox with your own e-mail address as the sender of the message, but you are pretty sure that you did not send yourself an offer for a rock-bottom mortgage rate or secrets to making millions on eBay. So then, what’s happening?
It’s not because a spammer has hijacked your e-mail account and is spamming the world using your identity but because the spammer is disguising the true sender of the e-mail with a different address, a process called e-mail spoofing, to target you specifically. In e-mail spoofing, the sender manually constructs the e-mail header and chooses which information (your e-mail address as the sender, for example) to include.

Why do the spammers do this? To get you to read the e-mail and/or click on the hyperlinks contained in the e-mail, of course. Sometimes the spammers want you to buy the products they are peddling; sometimes they want you to click on the link contained in the e-mail, which signals them that their e-mail message received a live account with a curious human at the other end, and they can then sell your e-mail address to other spammers as a potential audience for more spam from a different source. Sometimes it is for both these reasons and also to bypass filters set up through the e-mail client. Most people don’t even think about having to filter out e-mails sent to themselves from themselves.

Self-sending spam relies on human nature. A 2002 study by Hamilton, Ontario’s McMaster University revealed that e-mail’s containing shared names of the recipient had an emotional appeal that caused the recipient to read the e-mail in greater numbers than e-mail that came from sources that did not share a name with the recipient. Also, human curiosity compels the recipient to want to know how he has sent himself a spam e-mail, resulting in the recipient of self-sent spam to read the e-mail to investigate.
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Old 02-12-2007, 09:35 PM
astros99 astros99 is offline
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Yeah I've seen many many spams that have my own e-mail address and I've always wondered what's up with that, and how that happens. Now after reading your post I understand it. Luckily, with Gmail I don't have to worry about spam that much anymore because of it's spam folder. But thanks for the post, it really helped alot.
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Old 02-22-2007, 07:13 AM
fredilan fredilan is offline
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that is where SPF, DomainKey and SenderID comes in. To verify that the sender is the real owner of the email address he is using.
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