Today, I found "Etakajp, now you can squirt it like a
firehose!"
Now why would anyone want that? Companies would
probably get more attention and success if they offered
men a product which claimed for example, to *eliminate*
risk of getting some woman pregnant.
Don't worry. Squirt like a firehose and you'll rupture her innards so
bad that pregnancy will be the last thing on her mind.
As an aside, what spammers thought that it would be a good idea to
include the username in the subject line? Do they think that would
fool me? Most of my friends don't tend to use my name in the subject
line of emails. And even if by chance someone did, they wouldn't call
me "Awh" the way that the spammers do...
- awh
The guy in this video shows what can be accomplished.
http://sublimedirectory.com/stimes/09-16-2002/fu.mpg
NOTE: RESULTS ARE NOT TYPICAL!
-Jim
>Eric Takabayashi <eta...@yahoo.co.jp> wrote:
I think I have received the ultimate fukked-up spam. Check out the
headers on this one:
Return-Path: <y.hid...@genie.com>
Delivered-To: mike...@sunfield.ne.jp
Received: (qmail 28791 invoked from network); 14 Oct 2003 23:10:49
+0900
Received: from 200-207-114-27.zeronet.psi.br (HELO slfshfk)
(200.207.114.27)
by s-field2.sunfield.ne.jp with SMTP; 14 Oct 2003 23:10:49 +0900
To: <[TO_EMAIL]>
From: "Bev" <y.hid...@genie.com>
Subject: [SUBJECT][RANDOM_SPACE|20] [RANDOM_SMALL_LETTER|10]
X-Priority: 3
Content-Type: text/html; charset=ISO-8859-1
Reply-To: "[FROM_NAME]" <[FROM_EMAIL]>
X-Mailer: [RANDOM_BIG_LETTER|1][RANDOM_SMALL_LETTER|10] (ver.
[RANDOM_DIGIT|2].[RANDOM_DIGIT|3])
Message-ID: <[RANDOM_MIXED|5].[RANDOM_MIXED|7]@[RANDOM_MIXED|15]>
Received: from [[RANDOM_IP]] by [RANDOM_MIXED|8][CHR|13][CHR|10]
id [RANDOM_MIXED|5]-[RANDOM_MIXED|4] for <[FROM_EMAIL]>
Date: [DAY_WEEK], [DAY_MONTH] [MONTH] [YEAR] [TIME] [TIME_ZONE]
References: [RANDOM_DIGIT|6]$[RANDOM_DIGIT|7]@[RANDOM_MIXED|8]
X-RECEIVED-IP: [[RANDOM_IP]]
X-Originating-IP: [[RANDOM_IP]]
X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V6.00.2800.1106
X-MSMail-Priority: Normal
Precedence: bulk
X-AntiAbuse: This header was added to track abuse, please include it
with any abuse report
X-AntiAbuse: Primary Hostname - [RANDOM_IP]
X-AntiAbuse: Originator/Caller UID/GID - [[RANDOM_DIGIT|1]
[RANDOM_DIGIT|1]] / [[RANDOM_DIGIT|1] [RANDOM_DIGIT|1]]
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows; U; Windows NT 5.1; en-US; rv:1.2)
Gecko/[RANDOM_DIGIT|4].[RANDOM_DIGIT|2]
X-Originating-Host: [[RANDOM_IP]]; [DAY_WEEK], [DAY_MONTH] [MONTH]
[YEAR] [TIME] [TIME_ZONE]
X-Owner: [RANDOM_MIXED|10]
X-Scanner: : exiscan for exim4 (http://duncanthrax.net/exiscan/)
*[RANDOM_MIXED|25]*
The guy might want to learn how to set up his bulk mailing software
*before* he sends shit with it. What a dope.
Lot's of RANDOM in there.
>
"PublicEnema" <nichol...@onetel.net> wrote in message
news:3f8d...@212.67.96.135...
> Briefly talking of those dodgy Microsoft Security fixes. Could someone
> please advise me how I can stop them? I have zone alarm pro firewall and
the
> latest Norton Antivirus with definitions and the bastards still keep
getting
> into my mail and infecting my machine with the W32.SwenA virus. Its not a
> bad virus but opens up Media player everytime I open a mail.
>
> Apologies if this isnt in the ilk of the normal topics but from my
> understand some of you guys know your onions when it comes to IT Security.
>
> thanks in advance
> "Bryce" <fuk...@takethisout.hotmail.com> wrote in message
> news:nlejb.182$aj1....@news.uswest.net...
Awh, my understanding is that this is one way a spammer can randomize the
subject line, by adding the sent to name onto the string. Also why all the
random characters in spam subjects, supposed to defeat simple filters
looking for identifying subject lines.
that's one of the funniest videos I've ever seen. Also shows that Mike is
wrong, the woman doesn't blow up.
My ISP has user definable filters. One that I have set up is my username in the
subject line will delete the mail. The random meaningless characters beat
filters, but make it easy to visually identify the spam. (But we have better
ways of stopping spam)
.
----
"I went to Japan once, and was very dissapointed in what I saw."
quote from Japan Today forums.
my spam filter, guaranteed 99% effective or your money back:
1) the email originates from an open proxy
2) it contains a URL from a site hosted in China or Brazil
3) the URL contains the character @ or %
4) the message contains the phrase "really works"
Any two of the four tags the message as spam.
That's not easy to do programmatically.
>3) the URL contains the character @ or %
>4) the message contains the phrase "really works"
>
>Any two of the four tags the message as spam.
>
>
I'm not a programmer, but reverse DNS lookup? IP ranges for China & Brazil
are defined. Same for open proxy, there are numerous open proxy lists based
on originating IP addresses.