All, These types of one time messages are becoming more and more
common with myself, friends and e-mail colleagues. My OST100 address has
been out there for a decade with business cards left from Florida to
California. When it happened to me, I checked around to find out how
many got the message. Turned out very few received it and if opened, had
no virus noted. That has been a couple years ago and no one has commented
about computer troubles.
I'm now getting a short e-mail from friends having
this happen to them saying, sorry for the spam, or some such note to let friends
know message not from them. Hard to tell whether to open links, especially
from those who send funny or heartening links on to us. I ask folks not to
send me even the most delightful fwd.fwd.fwd.fwd forwarded messages.
Checking back with sender before opening sound advise we got from one of you
last week.
My advise, don't change your recognized e-mail
address. Ask sender in a separate e-mail before
opening questionable, and please don't send on the multiple
forwards.
Good to hear from all of you. Keep in
touch,
Charlotte Kahl
Chair OST100
In a message dated 3/13/2013 9:15:16 P.M. Central Daylight Time,
racos...@yahoo.com writes:
Barbra, I am trying to find
out what happened. I was either hacked, spammed, or cooked. Help me if you can
Thanks.
Richard Acosta -
President
Los Angeles Heights Neighborhood Association
PO Box
13057
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