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Previously on "What is point of some spam???"

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  • gables
    replied
    Originally posted by r0bly0ns View Post
    No danger (yet), just trying to bypass spam filters apparantly.

    http://www.marshal.com/pages/pressit...&section=press
    Ah, that does make sense. Some of the PDFs have had very plausible titles e.g. report.pdf, invoice.pdf.

    No iamfromnigeria.pdf yet

    Leave a comment:


  • r0bly0ns
    replied
    No danger (yet), just trying to bypass spam filters apparantly.

    http://www.marshal.com/pages/pressit...&section=press

    Leave a comment:


  • gables
    replied
    I've been getting a few now with a PDF attachement, can they run some sort of script in there if the PDF is opened which I don't - just curious.

    Leave a comment:


  • chicane
    replied
    Originally posted by zeitghost
    Wasn't there some cunning way of embedding a reference to a 1 pixel picture to detect if you'd opened it or not?
    Yep - they would create a dynamic script (e.g. PHP) with a specific numeric parameter representing your e-mail address. When you open the e-mail, the script gets called with your number, and the row corresponding to your name in a database somewhere in Nigeria gets updated to the 'gullible' status.

    That sort of foul business has thankfully long been relegated to the scrap heap by modern e-mail clients that ask you if you want to load the images in any given HTML email.

    Leave a comment:


  • richard-af
    replied
    Originally posted by zeitghost
    Wasn't there some cunning way of embedding a reference to a 1 pixel picture to detect if you'd opened it or not?

    Or was that apocryphal?
    We may never know. I heard that by opening such an email, you were transported to Alpha Centauri, to work in the Dilithium Crystal mines.
    Last edited by richard-af; 24 August 2007, 09:35.

    Leave a comment:


  • chicane
    replied
    I reckon some of it is either test runs (e.g. spammers seeing if they're able to exploit an open relay) or just incompetent spammers.

    Leave a comment:


  • TheFaQQer
    replied
    Most that I see have gibberish, but attachments / images that are the actual spam bit. Can't see how it works, but there you go.

    Leave a comment:


  • NickFitz
    replied
    It's possible they think you're dumb enough to reply thanking them for their effusive praise; this confirms that the email address is active, making it marginally more valuable when they sell it to other spammers.

    Or so the theory goes...

    Leave a comment:


  • King Cnvt
    replied
    Me too. Some is completely unreadable, other just says "quit", that's it.

    Even the spam you can read is just so obviously complete garbage, I can't imagine even 1 in a billion people responding to it*

    *apart from Americans, who appear to be as thick/gullible as pigtulip.

    Leave a comment:


  • xoggoth
    started a topic What is point of some spam???

    What is point of some spam???

    We all hate spam but I am completely puzzled by much of it. It doesn't offer viagra or invite you to send money to the widow of a Nigerian minister or contain a virus attachment or invite you to enter your bank details on a dodgy website. The message is just gibberish or there is no message at all.

    A recent one sent via my business mail form just said "Your site is great, regards Valintino Guxxi" A quick Google shows that Mr Guxxi alias infoginimp-wd03.websys.aol.com has informed the entire world their site is great.

    Can anyone cast any light on what purpose these messages serve to anybody including the senders?

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