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Thread: vacation send me money scam

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  1. #1
    Quilljar Guest

    Re: vacation send me money scam



    "David H. Lipman" wrote in message news:jq3fdu011o3@news1.newsguy.com...

    From: "Quilljar" <not@home.today>

    >
    >
    >
    >
    > Change the password to your Webmail account ASAP and make sure it is a
    > Strong Password.
    > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Password_strength
    >
    > I can do that but why my webmail account only please David
    >


    That's probably what was compromised.


    I have never had any contacts list in my Yahoo mail. I do not know of any
    other webmail connection that i may have.But I have certainly changed my
    password!
    thanks
    Q


  2. #2
    VanguardLH Guest

    Re: vacation send me money scam

    /NOTE: Missing attribution lines were inserted due to use of WLM v15 by
    Quilljar which doesn't add them nor did Quilljar bother to add them./

    Quilljar wrote:

    > David H. Lipman wrote...
    >
    >> Quilljar said:
    >>
    >>> David H. Lipman wrote...
    >>>
    >>>> Change the password to your Webmail account ASAP and make sure it
    >>>> is a Strong Password.
    >>>
    >>> I can do that but why my webmail account only

    >>
    >> That's probably what was compromised.

    >
    > I have never had any contacts list in my Yahoo mail. I do not know of
    > any other webmail connection that i may have.But I have certainly
    > changed my password!


    The webmail login credentials are the SAME as what you recorded in your
    local e-mail client. After using the webmail interface to your
    *account* to change your login credentials (usually just the password)
    then you'll have to update the accounts defined in your *unidentified*
    local e-mail client, too.

    There are a few (usually old) spambots that usurp your e-mail client to
    use it to send the outgoing spam but any decent anti-virus/malware
    program will probably catch those pests on your computer. It's clumsy
    to use your own e-mail client plus more likely to be visible than to run
    a spambot process on your computer. Also, it is more likely that your
    address book's contents got harvested and sent elsewhere to get use to
    generate the spam e-mails.

    Get a copy of the spam e-mails so you can see where it came from by the
    Received headers in it. Then you (or we) can tell if the spam is
    originating from your webmail account (i.e., it got hacked) or from
    somewhere else. If the contacts got harvested and sent somewhere else,
    your webmail account wasn't hacked so it's not the source of the spam
    and changing your account's password will have no effect on the spam
    generated from elsewhere.

    Also, besides changing the password in your e-mail account (up on the
    server), also change whatever information is requested by their "Forgot
    Password" process. If it was your webmail account that got hacked,
    changing your password means they'll just use your same old info
    requested by the "Forgot Password" process and they'll be back in. In
    fact, you might find the hacker already changed that data to something
    they will remember. Change to a STRONG password *and* change whatever
    gets used by the "Forgot Password" process.

    So when might you get around to performing a scan of your computer with
    a decent anti-virus/malware program? You have yet to mention doing so.

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