Pagina's in het onderwerp: [1 2] > | Peculiar "warning" received by email De persoon die dit onderwerp heeft geplaatst: Jennifer Forbes
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I've just received a slightly alarming email (ill-spelt and somewhat ungrammatical) warning me that if I don't stop my "illicit downloading activities" on the Internet, my service will be withdrawn.
As far as I'm aware, I haven't been engaging in any illicit downloading activities and I assume that this is yet another scam-spam.
Obviously, I haven't opened the message or downloaded anything from it.
Has anyone else received this "warning" lately?
Regards,
Jenny | | |
I received exactly the same warning at the beginning of the afternoon. It's quite peculiar. | | | Check the sender | Sep 16, 2008 |
Only your internet provider can send you such a thing, everything else is a spam. Just check the sender's address and probably you will see it was sent from a free email domain. | | |
The solution two steps:
1. Delete the email.
2. Forget about it.
Cheers! | |
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Kevin Fulton Verenigde Staten Local time: 16:06 Duits naar Engels Forward to your Internet service provider | Sep 16, 2008 |
You should set your e-mail client to reveal all headers and forward the e-mail to your ISP. (there's bound to be a "support" or "info" e-mail address for the ISP). I recently received something similar, forwarded it and received a response from my ISP. The header information is important, as it shows the routing of the e-mail. | | | JPW (X) Local time: 21:06 Spaans naar Engels + ... How do you know what's in it... | Sep 16, 2008 |
...if you didn't open it?!
I've just received a slightly alarming email (ill-spelt and somewhat ungrammatical) warning me that if I don't stop my "illicit downloading activities" on the Internet, my service will be withdrawn.
As far as I'm aware, I haven't been engaging in any illicit downloading activities and I assume that this is yet another scam-spam.
Obviously, I haven't opened the message or downloaded anything from it.
Has anyone else received this "warning" lately?
Regards,
Jenny
The only organisation that would send such an e-mail (a real one) would be your ISP.
It would not be ill-spelt and ungrammatical, and there would be something to identify them as your (real) ISP.
I get e-mails telling me I've won so many millions of "Great British Pounds" - nobody ever calls them that, that's the giveaway; and they can't spell. But yours is more sinister as it attempts to play on someone's guilt (real or otherwise).
Perhaps you should pass it on to your ISP and ask them if they sent it? Otherwise bin it and move on. | | | Wouldn't worry | Sep 16, 2008 |
Jenny Forbes wrote:
Has anyone else received this "warning" lately?
Nah, the focus of my spam has shifted from the upper trouser area to the level of my debt.
But I gather from other fora that a flurry of emails of the type you describe is doing the rounds.
The point is:
1. they assume (as they do, e.g. with those paypal emails) that a significant proportion of users are involved in downloading/file sharing. If you ain't, forget it (like I do with Paypal ones)
2. IF you were involved in illegal activity do you think it is more likely that:
a) you'll get a nice email asking you ever so nicely to stop
or
b) the old bill will batter your front door down at 3 a.m. and confiscate your kit for a look see? | | | No passing - Just delete it! | Sep 16, 2008 |
John Paul Weir wrote:
Perhaps you should pass it on to your ISP and ask them if they sent it? Otherwise bin it and move on.
No, honestly folks I would not invest any millisecond more on this. Just delete it and let's forget about it!  | |
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Jennifer Forbes Local time: 21:06 Frans naar Engels + ... ONDERWERPSTARTER In memoriam
John Paul Weir wrote:
...if you didn't open it?!
I've just received a slightly alarming email (ill-spelt and somewhat ungrammatical) warning me that if I don't stop my "illicit downloading activities" on the Internet, my service will be withdrawn.
As far as I'm aware, I haven't been engaging in any illicit downloading activities and I assume that this is yet another scam-spam.
Obviously, I haven't opened the message or downloaded anything from it.
Has anyone else received this "warning" lately?
Regards,
Jenny
The only organisation that would send such an e-mail (a real one) would be your ISP.
It would not be ill-spelt and ungrammatical, and there would be something to identify them as your (real) ISP.
I get e-mails telling me I've won so many millions of "Great British Pounds" - nobody ever calls them that, that's the giveaway; and they can't spell. But yours is more sinister as it attempts to play on someone's guilt (real or otherwise).
Perhaps you should pass it on to your ISP and ask them if they sent it? Otherwise bin it and move on.
Since you ask, I can read it in Outlook Express without opening it.
OK, everyone, thank you for your comments. The message has been deleted and we'll forget about it.
Regards,
Jenny | | | Ralf Lemster Duitsland Local time: 22:06 Engels naar Duits + ... Beware of the 'Preview' pane | Sep 16, 2008 |
Hi Jenny,
Since you ask, I can read it in Outlook Express without opening it.
I take it you're using the Preview pane. That's a high-risk approach, as HTML-based malware can infect your computer when looking at the message in that pane.
I have deactivated the Preview function in Outlook on all machines.
Best regards,
Ralf | | | JPW (X) Local time: 21:06 Spaans naar Engels + ... Now I see (said the blind man) | Sep 16, 2008 |
Since you ask, I can read it in Outlook Express without opening it.
OK, everyone, thank you for your comments. The message has been deleted and we'll forget about it.
Regards,
Jenny

Tomás wrote:
No passing - Just delete it!
John Paul Weir wrote:
Perhaps you should pass it on to your ISP and ask them if they sent it? Otherwise bin it and move on.
No, honestly folks I would not invest any millisecond more on this. Just delete it and let's forget about it!
Tomás, you're right: why bother! They probably wouldn't do anything about it anyway. | | | How could Microsoft leave the Preview panel enabled... | Sep 16, 2008 |
Jenny Forbes wrote:
Since you ask, I can read it in Outlook Express without opening it.
Unfortunately Jenny, you have already opened it by seeing it in the preview panel. You have also downloaded it to your computer. So a real risk still exist. If you get a lot of spam, I sincerely recommend to get any piece of software that can download THE TEXT (and nothing else) from the email server and show it to you before the email is even downloaded to your email client.
We have been using Firetrust MailWasher with great results for several years. Spam or virus never make it to our computers and we are in control of what is and isn't spam. | |
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Alison MacG Verenigd Koninkrijk Local time: 21:06 Duits naar Engels + ... Message source tab, rather than preview pane? | Sep 16, 2008 |
This is my understanding of what Jenny has done:
In Outlook Express, you can view the content of an email without actually opening it by doing the following:
right click on the unread email
click properties
click details
click message source
As well as giving you all of the originating details of the email, this also allows you to view the content of the message. You can then delete the email as still unread. Perhaps someone who knows could confirm that this... See more This is my understanding of what Jenny has done:
In Outlook Express, you can view the content of an email without actually opening it by doing the following:
right click on the unread email
click properties
click details
click message source
As well as giving you all of the originating details of the email, this also allows you to view the content of the message. You can then delete the email as still unread. Perhaps someone who knows could confirm that this is safe? ▲ Collapse | | | Jennifer Forbes Local time: 21:06 Frans naar Engels + ... ONDERWERPSTARTER In memoriam I'd stopped worrying about it, but now you've got me worried again! | Sep 16, 2008 |
Ralf Lemster wrote:
Hi Jenny,
Since you ask, I can read it in Outlook Express without opening it.
I take it you're using the Preview pane. That's a high-risk approach, as HTML-based malware can infect your computer when looking at the message in that pane.
I have deactivated the Preview function in Outlook on all machines.
Best regards,
Ralf
Thank you, Ralf and others, for your warning.
Please could you explain to me (simply - I'm blonde) how to deactivate the preview pane. I've tried doing it myself using Outlook Express's soi-disant Help, but there was nothing there about deactivating preview panes or deactivating anything. I've deleted the original message now, anyway.
Kind regards,
Jenny | | | Shaalini Bansal Verenigd Koninkrijk Local time: 21:06 Engels naar Hindi + ... Received the same | Sep 16, 2008 |
I received the same mail a few minutes back.... but have deleted it as it looked dubious. | | | Pagina's in het onderwerp: [1 2] > | To report site rules violations or get help, contact a site moderator: You can also contact site staff by submitting a support request » Peculiar "warning" received by email CafeTran Espresso |
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