MikeBCda
January 25th, 2004, 01:35 PM
Hi,
This seemed as good a starting place for this one as any -- but if the mods can thnk of a better home for it, that's fine.
This one was caught and quarantined by my ISP's excellent version of SpamGuard, and I deleted it there without delivery, so my own software (SG and SB, primarily, plus avast) never got a look at it. So this is more curiosity than anything else.
When incoming mail has a subject line that seems to be made up of several randomly-chosen words, is that most likely just an attempt to get past some of the "lazier" spam checkers? This particular one was "Labradorite agnes balmy glutamate annulled" -- I even wondered if the first initials made up an recognizable acronym.
This had to go through their VirusGuard, usually very reliable (updated daily), before being passed on to SpamGuard, so I'm guesssing it was only "ordinary" junk rather than malware.
One last note -- the SpamGuard on my server permits looking at plain-text contents (I didn't bother), and I don't recall the unknown sender's name or addy. And this particular SpamGuard not only scans content but even flags the message as to type of spam (e.g., porn, get-rich-quick, etc.).
Thanks and best,
Mike
This seemed as good a starting place for this one as any -- but if the mods can thnk of a better home for it, that's fine.
This one was caught and quarantined by my ISP's excellent version of SpamGuard, and I deleted it there without delivery, so my own software (SG and SB, primarily, plus avast) never got a look at it. So this is more curiosity than anything else.
When incoming mail has a subject line that seems to be made up of several randomly-chosen words, is that most likely just an attempt to get past some of the "lazier" spam checkers? This particular one was "Labradorite agnes balmy glutamate annulled" -- I even wondered if the first initials made up an recognizable acronym.
This had to go through their VirusGuard, usually very reliable (updated daily), before being passed on to SpamGuard, so I'm guesssing it was only "ordinary" junk rather than malware.
One last note -- the SpamGuard on my server permits looking at plain-text contents (I didn't bother), and I don't recall the unknown sender's name or addy. And this particular SpamGuard not only scans content but even flags the message as to type of spam (e.g., porn, get-rich-quick, etc.).
Thanks and best,
Mike