Message to Mr Nuncius. Have you changed your email address
lately? I sent you an email a few days ago and only today have I been
told that it bounced.
At the same time as that message I received three other
messages about bounced emails. These were worded differently and were
to addresses I have never heard of. I assume that this is coincidence,
or has Mr Nuncius become involved in a new groups of phishers? ITWSBT
Mike Ruddock
Www: maslin
Ooo er! Nope, same old address. Other stuff seems to be getting here OK.
Would you like to try again?
> At the same time as that message I received three other
> messages about bounced emails. These were worded differently and were
> to addresses I have never heard of. I assume that this is coincidence,
> or has Mr Nuncius become involved in a new groups of phishers? ITWSBT
You think I'm an aphishionado? How dare you, sir!
--
Sid
Make sure Matron is away when you reply
some of our addresses were getting thousands of those per hour,
peaking on christmas day. i had a _super_ time that day (perhaps
umrats can understand why people in my position tend not to find
*anything* spammers do in the least bit amusing).
it's not (afaict) phishers, but spammers using your address (typically
with some completely other name) to send their slime to their list of
"validated" addresses. if i look at our logs, i see whole minutes,
sometimes, when the only thing happening is we reject thousands of
offers of mail to addresses which have never existed here: and some of
these message rejections will appear as bounces in some poor sap's
mailbox.
the spammers really are trying to destroy the internet as we know it.
--
Robin Fairbairns, Cambridge
>
>some of our addresses were getting thousands of those per hour,
>peaking on christmas day. i had a _super_ time that day (perhaps
>umrats can understand why people in my position tend not to find
>*anything* spammers do in the least bit amusing).
I sometimes get thousands an hour just to my own domain. I find that
seeing some amusement in spammers is absolutely essential.
--
Cheers, Kimbo (Keeper of the Languid Wave (tm))
Best of umra archive www.totternhoe.demon.co.uk/umra/
> I assume that this is coincidence,
>or has Mr Nuncius become involved in a new groups of phishers? ITWSBT
>
Ooooh nooooo, I feel a pun thread coming on.
<fx: heads for bed>
--
Jo
Giles: I assume there is a perfectly reasonable and not at all insane
explanation.
ITWSBT
Sam
(That wasn't a dirty crack, it was a phisher.)
> Mike Ruddock <mi...@ruddock50.fsnet.co.uk> writes:
>> Message to Mr Nuncius. [snip]
>>
>> At the same time as that message I received three other
>>messages about bounced emails. These were worded differently and were
>>to addresses I have never heard of. I assume that this is coincidence,
>>or has Mr Nuncius become involved in a new groups of phishers? ITWSBT
>
>some of our addresses were getting thousands of those per hour,
>peaking on christmas day. i had a _super_ time that day (perhaps
>umrats can understand why people in my position tend not to find
>*anything* spammers do in the least bit amusing).
At least you get paid for it. I'm doing this as displacement activity
from cialis-spammer-proofing the guestbook on my website.
One day someone with a touch less self control than me is going to do
something very nasty to one of these scum. And I'm going to cheer when
they do it.
>the spammers really are trying to destroy the internet as we know it.
Yes. Having wrecked mail and newsgroups they are now after websites as
well. Are they sponsored by Murdoch I wonder.
--
On-line canal route planner: http://www.canalplan.org.uk
(Waterways World site of the month, April 2001)
>
>Yes. Having wrecked mail and newsgroups they are now after websites as
>well. Are they sponsored by Murdoch I wonder.
For what value of wrecked? Certainly one of my email addresses is much
harder to use than it need be, which hacks me off no end, but even
that one isn't *wrecked* yet (though it might get there). The others
are all easily manageble. And this newsgroup is <touch wood> pretty
healthy. As are the others I regularly use.
I loathe spammers as utter scum, and will be buying the next ticket
after you to watch somebody do something hideous to them, but let's
not grant them more power than they have, and let's not scaremonger,
eh wot?
>On Sun, 15 Jan 2006 18:40:11 +0000, Nick Atty
><nos...@nandj.freeserve.co.uk> wrote:
>
>>
>>Yes. Having wrecked mail and newsgroups they are now after websites as
>>well. Are they sponsored by Murdoch I wonder.
>
>For what value of wrecked? Certainly one of my email addresses is much
>harder to use than it need be, which hacks me off no end, but even
>that one isn't *wrecked* yet (though it might get there). The others
>are all easily manageble. And this newsgroup is <touch wood> pretty
>healthy. As are the others I regularly use.
Well for email, it's fine if you only ever share your email address with
people who know you. Which is nice for those who just want to send
letters to each other (as it where).
But try putting an email address on a web site. So that, for example,
people can tell you what it's like.
Then point that address at a black-hole and never use it again. It will
be so swamped with crap as to be unusable for ever and ever and ever
after just a couple of days.
So you end up writing scripts on the website so people can email you.
This works. But it means that you are spending time and effort and
hardware and software on defeating the spammers (ie, in restoring the
status quo) rather than in adding new stuff that actually benefits
anyone.
It's like never being able to repair your roof because you are spending
every day cleaning the graffiti off your front wall.
>I loathe spammers as utter scum, and will be buying the next ticket
>after you to watch somebody do something hideous to them, but let's
>not grant them more power than they have, and let's not scaremonger,
>eh wot?
Not scaremongering I hope. Just (particularly) depressed.
> Well for email, it's fine if you only ever share your email address
with
> people who know you. Which is nice for those who just want to send
> letters to each other (as it where).
Until one of them gets a virus or some other malware that uploads their
address book to spam central.
> But try putting an email address on a web site. So that, for example,
> people can tell you what it's like.
Curiously, the address I publish on my website seems to be the only one I
have that does not get spam sent to it. That might be because it's
"webmaster@..." or it might be because of the mild obfuscation I've used.
(The email address looks and works as it should, but does not contain the
actual @ character.)
--
Jim <http://www.jim-easterbrook.me.uk/>
1959/1985? M B+ G+ A L I- S- P-- CH0(p) Ar++ T+ H0 Q--- Sh0
i've had my present address (more or less) since the mid-80s. some of
the addresses i supposedly get spam from (the great and the good in my
areas of work) are really pretty amazing.
>> But try putting an email address on a web site. So that, for example,
>> people can tell you what it's like.
>
>Curiously, the address I publish on my website seems to be the only one I
>have that does not get spam sent to it. That might be because it's
>"webmaster@..." or it might be because of the mild obfuscation I've used.
>(The email address looks and works as it should, but does not contain the
>actual @ character.)
you mean, it's not an href='mail:...'?
to first order, spam address fishing doesn't bother unless it's a real
address on view, or in the link.
otoh, since i started watching the mail queues here, i started to
realise there's an awful lot of hit&miss involved in spamming. for
example, our exciting christmas day event (when a spam flood was faked
as coming from three addresses in my domain) was a problem for us
because of the huge amount of spam sent out that simply bounced back
to the (non-)sender[*]. and of course, if i look at the dynamic logs,
i'll see our system rejecting far more mail than it accepts, simply
because it's directed at ludicrously incorrect addresses.
someone here said, you need to laugh at them as otherwise you would go
mad. for me, these people have created a mechanism whereby, at no
significant effort on their part, they create a lot of hard work for
me: so i find it difficult to do anything other than hate them.
[*] two defunct addresses for which we were still (anomalously)
forwarding and one internal address which is used for routing.
fortunately i could delete them all (the routing one by inventing a
different internal address).
--
Robin Fairbairns, Cambridge
>>For what value of wrecked? Certainly one of my email addresses is much
>>harder to use than it need be, which hacks me off no end, but even
>>that one isn't *wrecked* yet (though it might get there). The others
>>are all easily manageble. And this newsgroup is <touch wood> pretty
>>healthy. As are the others I regularly use.
>
>Well for email, it's fine if you only ever share your email address with
>people who know you. Which is nice for those who just want to send
>letters to each other (as it where).
>
>But try putting an email address on a web site. So that, for example,
>people can tell you what it's like.
I have. Hence the "one of my email addresses" etc up there. I get
several thousand spam a day to that one. So I do empathise with your
complaint, I just don't accept the bastards have ground us down yet!
>
>someone here said, you need to laugh at them as otherwise you would go
>mad. for me, these people have created a mechanism whereby, at no
>significant effort on their part, they create a lot of hard work for
>me: so i find it difficult to do anything other than hate them.
That, roughly paraphrased, was me. And I find it entirely possible to
hate them while extracting what little entertainment I can from the
situation. Laughing at people you despise is hardly a new idea!
>On Sun, 15 Jan 2006 20:59:32 +0000, Nick Atty
><nos...@nandj.freeserve.co.uk> wrote:
>
>>>For what value of wrecked? Certainly one of my email addresses is much
>>>harder to use than it need be, which hacks me off no end, but even
>>>that one isn't *wrecked* yet (though it might get there). The others
>>>are all easily manageble. And this newsgroup is <touch wood> pretty
>>>healthy. As are the others I regularly use.
>>
>>Well for email, it's fine if you only ever share your email address with
>>people who know you. Which is nice for those who just want to send
>>letters to each other (as it where).
>>
>>But try putting an email address on a web site. So that, for example,
>>people can tell you what it's like.
>
>I have. Hence the "one of my email addresses" etc up there. I get
>several thousand spam a day to that one. So I do empathise with your
>complaint, I just don't accept the bastards have ground us down yet!
I have an e-mail address on my blog, and it gets negligible quantities
of spam. Either I am lucky, or my ISP (the ever wonderful Zen) have
highly effective filters.
--
Stephen <http://wenlock.blogspot.com/>
Into my heart an air that kills from yon far country blows:
What are those blue remembered hills, what spires, what farms are those?
That is the land of lost content, I see it shining plain,
The happy highways where I went and cannot come again.
> Jim Easterbrook <ne...@jim-easterbrook.me.uk> writes:
>
>>Curiously, the address I publish on my website seems to be the only
>>one I have that does not get spam sent to it. That might be because
>>it's "webmaster@..." or it might be because of the mild obfuscation
>>I've used. (The email address looks and works as it should, but does
>>not contain the actual @ character.)
>
> you mean, it's not an href='mail:...'?
It is an href="mailto:...", but I use %40 instead of @ in the href. It
may be that this munging still attracts spam and my ISP is doing some
good filtering, but spam comes through on my other addresses.
>Well for email, it's fine if you only ever share your email address with
>people who know you. Which is nice for those who just want to send
>letters to each other (as it where).
>
>But try putting an email address on a web site. So that, for example,
>people can tell you what it's like.
>
>Then point that address at a black-hole and never use it again. It will
>be so swamped with crap as to be unusable for ever and ever and ever
>after just a couple of days.
Mine's been on my website for five years. I'm getting 30 spams per
day at the moment, up from about 3 per day when the address was wholly
new. Spamassassin makes sure I never see them, it's hardly 'wrecked'.
Admittedly I've not been posting on Usenet that widely for the last few
years: I do know people who take a more active part in antispam who get
thousands of spams per day.
In my experience, just putting your address on your website isn't a big
risk. Corresponding with people, however trustworthy, who let viruses
in is probably much riskier - the virus will trawl their machine as
it's a good source of 'live' email addresses. Also posting on Usenet,
although uk.* seems fairly safe (if my 30 spams per day count as safe !)
Nick
--
So when is Tony Blair going to start treating *us* with respect ?
> Also posting on Usenet,
>although uk.* seems fairly safe (if my 30 spams per day count as safe !)
I have noticed a recent upsurge in spam attacks to the "reply to" address I
use on usenet, probably not as many as to my "from" address (both work and
get vaguely scanned by me in ScanMailbox).
--
Penny
The problem is we live in a blame culture - whose fault's that?
umra Nicknames & Abbreviations http://www.umra.freeuk.com/nicks.html
>In article <codls15c6f2g0br06...@4ax.com>,
>Nick Atty <nos...@nandj.freeserve.co.uk> wrote:
>
>>Well for email, it's fine if you only ever share your email address with
>>people who know you. Which is nice for those who just want to send
>>letters to each other (as it where).
>>
>>But try putting an email address on a web site. So that, for example,
>>people can tell you what it's like.
>>
>>Then point that address at a black-hole and never use it again. It will
>>be so swamped with crap as to be unusable for ever and ever and ever
>>after just a couple of days.
>
>Mine's been on my website for five years. I'm getting 30 spams per
>day at the moment, up from about 3 per day when the address was wholly
>new. Spamassassin makes sure I never see them, it's hardly 'wrecked'.
>Admittedly I've not been posting on Usenet that widely for the last few
>years: I do know people who take a more active part in antispam who get
>thousands of spams per day.
>
I've always used my correct email address for usenet postings and
after getting on for ten years I suppose I get about 120 spam per day.
Since I learned to trust mailwasher it's only the mildest
inconvenience.
--
Andy Minter
>In my experience, just putting your address on your website isn't a big
>risk. Corresponding with people, however trustworthy, who let viruses
>in is probably much riskier - the virus will trawl their machine as
>it's a good source of 'live' email addresses. Also posting on Usenet,
>although uk.* seems fairly safe (if my 30 spams per day count as safe !)
I got 50[all numbers approx] today, to an email address that was last
used on usenet about 3 years ago.
Then about 10 to this address (which still fools 90% of the stuff), 30
or so to an email address that was on a website once (the main one is
now blackholed), 40 to randomly invented addresses (admin@ any domain I
have, for example) and 4 to an address that exists only inside the
source code of a downloadable software package.
there has been a recent upsurge, but my impression is it's going off
the boil again (we're past the middle of the month, and i'm well below
half my monthly total).
what's just as bad as ever is the virus mail bounces. some virus-
writing slime contrived to create nearly 600 bounces to my mailbox in
the small hours of sunday morning.
--
Robin Fairbairns, Cambridge
>Then about 10 to this address (which still fools 90% of the stuff)
Is that because the spambots delete the "nospam" element and fail to
replace it with anything?
>On Tue, 17 Jan 2006 20:19:59 +0000, Nick Atty a gribouillé dans la
>poussière...
>
>>Then about 10 to this address (which still fools 90% of the stuff)
>
>Is that because the spambots delete the "nospam" element and fail to
>replace it with anything?
I think that the less sophisticated ones have a 'if it says "nospam"
then junk it' rule, and the more sophisticated ones do as you say.
The only problem is the odd human who doesn't believe it is a real
address!
On the subject, I've noticed that there aren't that many different spams
around - if I "ignore" rather than "delete" them in my spam box, it
removes a fair number (I have to look in there, because Freeserve have
about a 1 in 10 failure rate - roughly equal quantities of type 1 and
type 2 errors).
|Mine's been on my website for five years. I'm getting 30 spams per
|day at the moment, up from about 3 per day when the address was wholly
|new.
niles.org.uk has been up since 5 Jan 2000, and I've had websites before that
with this email address on it -- probably from '97.. I've been posting to
usenet since 98, also with this address. SpamPal thinks I get about 10 a
day, but that allows for some it misses and some it catches a little
over-zealously. I must be really lucky and I should probably shut up now.
I'm not counting -- all the comment spam I get on my blog, the thousands
sent to the address for webm...@gaynottingham.co.uk that I foolishly used
to 'submit your site to search engines', spam that goes to pretty much every
username on niles.org.uk
n
--
Niles, Nottingham |
ICQ UIN 12724766 | We're not heroes!
www.alexfoster.me.uk | We're from Finchley!
flickr.com/photos/niles |