Mike Easter <MikeE@ster.invalid> wrote in
news:8lfr5iF8f5U1@mid.individual.net:
> Li'l Abner wrote:
>
>> The spam I got from him had his own return email address, as did the
>> others who complained to him. How would they have known who to
>> complain to if it didn't come from his email address. You think his
>> neighbor's machines would send out email with *his* return address?
>
> As a general rule, the vast majority of spam sourced from the zombies
> does *not* have the From of the computer which sourced the spam.
>
> You do not determine the source of a spam from the From. You determine
> the source of a spam by carefully examining the headers to determine
> the source IP.
>
> The small minority of spam which comes from a mail account in which
> the
> From actually *does* represent th source of the spam comes from
> cracked
> webmail passwords, so the source of the spam in those cases is the
> From's webmail account.
>
> In such a case the machine in question is not the source of the
> webmail.
>
> As a general rule, except for the cracked webmail account example
> above, the source of a spam is *not* the From.
Please see my reply to VanguardLH. It may contain a lot of that "more
informatioo" you were requesting.
--
--- Everybody has a right to my opinion. ---


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