Viruses

T

Travis King

How come I have been getting lots of fake windows update
e-mails lately? I know that they are viruses but I get
like 6 of them a day. I seem to be getting all of the
possible e-mail viruses you can get. I delete them all.
 
D

dana

Lots of people are getting 6,000 per day!
Be glad you are not in the address books of a lot of foolish people who
tried to download the "Microsoft Update."
 
K

Ken Blake

In
Travis King said:
How come I have been getting lots of fake windows update
e-mails lately? I know that they are viruses but I get
like 6 of them a day. I seem to be getting all of the
possible e-mail viruses you can get. I delete them all.


Because you post in newsgroups with what is apparently your real
E-mail address, and/or because your address is in the address
book of people who are infected.
 
B

Bruce Chambers

Greetings --

What you received is either a very common malicious hoax or the
output of a computer infected by one of several wide-spread, mass
emailing worms. The most widely-known are:

W32.Swen.A_mm
http://securityresponse.symantec.com/avcenter/venc/data/[email protected]

W32.Dumaru_mm
http://securityresponse.symantec.com/avcenter/venc/data/[email protected]

W32.Gibe_mm
http://securityresponse.symantec.com/avcenter/venc/data/[email protected]

Microsoft never has, does not currently, and never will email
unsolicited security patches. At the most, if, and only if, you
subscribe to their security notification newsletter, they will send
you an email informing you that a new patch is available for
downloading.

Microsoft Policies on Software Distribution
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/treeview/?url=/technet/security/policy/swdist.asp

Information on Bogus Microsoft Security Bulletin Emails
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/treeview/default.asp?url=/technet/security/news/patch_hoax.asp

How to Tell If a Microsoft Security-Related Message Is Genuine
http://www.microsoft.com/security/antivirus/authenticate_mail.asp

Any and all legitimate patches and updates are readily available
at http://windowsupdate.microsoft.com/. (Notice that this is the true
URL, rather than the bogus one that may have been contained in the
email you received.) Any messages that point to any other source(s) or
claim to have the patch attached are bogus.

You're receiving these emails because your email address is in
the address book of someone infected with a worm, and/or because you
posted your real email address somewhere on-line, either in a forum
accessible to the public and spambots, such as Usenet, or on an
untrustworthy web site that subsequently sold your address as part of
a mailing list. One thing you can do is notify _everyone_ with whom
you've ever corresponded via email that one or more of them may be
infected with a mass emailing worm, and should take the appropriate
steps.

There's probably no way of blocking all of the bogus messages, but
you can greatly reduce the number you get by creating a rule, based
upon the most commonly used subject lines, to delete the emails from
the server without ever downloading them.


Bruce Chambers

--
Help us help you:



You can have peace. Or you can have freedom. Don't ever count on
having both at once. -- RAH
 
E

Evan Stedman

If you use Outlook you can configure Outlook to
permanently delete these messages by creating a rule to
remove these messages based upon the following phrase
being in the body of the message: "September 2003,
Cumulative Patch" use the rules wizard ro create the rule.
 

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