How to Stop email : MIcrosoft Critical Patch

  • Thread starter Thread starter Don
  • Start date Start date
D

Don

Is there an easier way to stop the worms and viruses from slowing down my
email?
I get 10-15 messages per day either from Microsoft Inet Delivery System or
Microsoft, all authentic looking messages, with attachments... My virus scan
kills them, and removes the attachments... is there anyway in outlook to
delete them on the server or something?

If I don't check my mail daily, I may have 50 of these messages, and with
200K + attachments... it might take me 30 minutes to get my mail....

anyone?
 
Greetings --

No one will compensate you, as your problem was entirely
self-inflicted.

What you received is the output of a computer infected by one of
several widely publicized, wide-spread, mass emailing worms. The
virus' authors have deliberately spoofed the Microsoft information in
the hopes of garnering more victims. This sort of email has been
quite common for at least the past 10 months. 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]

Trojan.Xombe
http://www.symantec.com/avcenter/venc/data/trojan.xombe.html

Microsoft never has, does not currently, and very probably 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

Remember, any and all legitimate patches and updates are readily
available at http://windowsupdate.microsoft.com/. You should develop
the habit of checking this site at least once a month to keep your
computer up-to-date. (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. You can also ask your ISP to take steps to preclude their mail
server from passing on such emails. Many ISPs have such filtering
capabilities.


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
 
Hi Don
There are a few freeware programs around that allow you to filter spam
before you download your e-mail. One is Magic Mail from
http://www.geeba.org/magic/ I use this one myself and find it ok.
There is also one called Mailwasher http://www.mailwasher.net/
The main difference is Magic will work on multiple accounts, Mailwasher only
on one account with the freeware version
K
 
The first thing to do is to never use your real email address to post to
this or any other public group. That is how the spammers and virus mongers
get your address.
 
What I did was to create a new message rule where by I took all of the
legitimate addresses from people I know plus the addresses from all of the
legitimate newsletters that I receive & created a new rule. I then pasted
all of these addresses into the rule & then told it to delete from server
all emails that aren't on this list & have a size greater that 100kb.

The only risk is if you don't add new people to your rule as required or you
get sent a much smaller email with a virus.
 
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