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Has Your Email Address Been Stolen?
by Leo A. Notenboom Visit the Author's Website
You're minding your own
business, and one day you get email from someone you've never heard of,
and they're asking you to stop sending them email. Or worse, they're
angry. Or worse yet, they accuse you of sending them a virus! But you
don't know them, you've never heard of them, and you know you've never
sent them email.
Welcome to the world of viruses, where you can get the blame for
someone else's infection. And there's worse news to come.
Before I get to that, though, there is always a small possibility that
your email account has been compromised. The solution there is simple: change your password, immediately.
That should prevent someone who's using your account for malicious
purposes from continuing, assuming you've chosen a good password.
But these days that's not the most common cause for the situation I've
described. Viruses are. And
what's worse, there's almost nothing you can do.
The MyDoom/Novarg virus currently running rampant is a great example.
The virus infects someone's machine, and then looks in the email
address book on that machine, and emails a copy of itself to everyone
it finds. What it also does is forge the "From:" address for the email
that it sends. What does it use to forge the address? Why the addresses
in the address book, of course. So infected machine will send email to
everyone in the address book, looking as if it was sent by other people
in that address book, even though it was not.
Let's use a concrete example: Peter's machine gets infected with the MyDoom virus. In his address book
are entries for friends Paul, and Mary. Paul and Mary have never met,
have never exchanged email, and do not know each other - they each just
know Peter. The virus on Peter's machine will send email with the virus
to Paul looking like it came from Mary. Paul may wonder who the heck
this Mary person is and why she's sending him a virus, but she was
never involved.
If you're in Mary's place, you can see that it would be frustrating to
be accused of something that you had nothing to do with and have no
control over.
For the record, your email address may end up in the address books of
people you don't know as well. Various email programs will
automatically hold on to additional email addresses that were included
on email you received, or possibly from email that was forwarded.
Viruses have also been known to use other sources of email addresses,
or even forward them around as the virus spreads. What that means is
that the simple "friend of a friend" example I used with Peter, Paul
and Mary, while simple and certainly possible, is not the only way your
email could show up as a forged "from" line.
What's important here is simply this: one way or another, email viruses
lie about who sent them.
If someone accuses you of sending a virus-laden email, and you are
positive you did not, then you have very little recourse other than
trying to educate them about how viruses work. Point them at this
article if you like. But be clear: you're not necessarily infected, nor
is the person who received the mail claiming to be from you. It's some
third party who is. (And identifying that third party is difficult -
this is why virus writers use this technique.)
And of course be sure that you're not going to get infected yourself: don't open attachments from people you
don't know, and make sure you have an up-to-date virus checker
and virus definitions file.
Leo A. Notenboom is a software engineer
and entrepreneur who worked for Microsoft for many years, either
developing some of the company's best known software or managing other
engineers who did. When he left he started his own software engineering
company and consulting firm, Pudget Sound Software. In addition to the
services offered through pugetsoundsoftware.com, Leo runs the
the popular Ask Leo! technical support site (www.ask-leo.com).
Leo can be reached at leo@pugetsoundsoftware.com.
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