Rick's b.log - 2012/06/20 |
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It is the 21st of November 2024 You are 18.227.48.131, pleased to meet you! |
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mailto:
blog -at- heyrick -dot- eu
[note - broken img tag (no >), reference to class with no css, horrible markup, equally horrible spelling; I have reformatted some of the ridiculously long lines (X-Spam-Summary, etc) to fit into this article - the original is available upon request...]
As this would appear to be a phishing attempt, I felt perhaps Yahoo! might like to know. I receive mail from Yahoo! by POP into Thunderbird, so I can't report directly from Yahoo! itself.
So I search the website. And I search some more. Eventually, having not found anything like an "abuse at yahoo dot com" reporting facility, I send an email under the heading "Suspicious email from Yahoo" (as none of the other categories are relevant). My message read:
I received a prompt reply from Sarah who obviously obviously a customer support operative rather than a techie.
Here's what she had to say:
From the help page linked, I quote the relevant paragraphs:
Not one single mention of how to tackle spam or suspect messages if you are using your own email client. Is Yahoo! so WEB2.0 that they've forgotten what email actually is and how it works?
Whatever... I feel like I'm chasing phantoms. I won't bother reporting this sort of thing in the future. Instead I'll just mark Sarah's reply as not helpful (sorry Sarah) and provide a link to this article in the "why" box. Maybe, hopefully, somebody higher up the food chain will understand what I'm trying to say here.
Phishing and Yahoo!
I received the following by email:
From - Thu Jun 07 06:20:28 2012
X-Account-Key: account7
X-UIDL: AK1TfbwAAQocT8xrLQwUW2R+K0A
X-Mozilla-Status: 0001
X-Mozilla-Status2: 00000000
X-Mozilla-Keys:
X-Apparently-To: heyrickmail-usenet@yahoo.co.uk via 188.
125.83.173; Mon, 04 Jun 2012 08:00:45 +0000
Received-SPF: none (domain of yahoo.com does not designate pe
rmitted sender hosts)
X-YMailISG: TE0EXL8WLDtvRZXYBxJvTggQnsNS.tt003wJ4z0RFNA6_FoX
mBzRfdugdzYO5kbNFg81buTtkOv4lZmyS2sQ5Kj4XhGS4s9si2d6YsdgnoZ_
eyBV9ErWzovxZ6KoffgFausEoQr8PcRQ8MTC_d1Nq0jSKFH6lXRgwOXg3Mhm
5X4WiuqDVhtxhg2MOZwE8jVavze1sISWlA1JHiZobcaVEwPO3j1c4VrNbxFj
Gndd1Ny24Dt1BhAqyk9k3hxtlqJUlg0DWdQr7lvThMGXwn3wEosSGbI_NyOU
ej1ccH.43K.3_1oVRfC.X2yHTMgbAOHwkGad7JmH8q9k3LT1KDbirMNG6CFw
2rVCg1lr40XyfKSBYkwUgR8fftkmMbUyZuy8JLMoCW58XoRJFRko0C6myIqP
4D86Wn7uTfVIvEHnKIA7E0XXp9tpE.SAPJRdLtdfSAIe3B9TM9CxtcMTATHG
L4jUXgZi_bY0gg8F.z.1uQ_EjZ_CweEkk1vBbot5eamQojE4vv7elaftZ2WJ
Rm55HM8QokFea_J389zEQC3BNyFT5pNbr.EcKNP7q6I4Q2G_.1cSQMHbXqoy
POD2msj9KvJAacVPFH4Dh0dxNbN9QS_SPNUdrfC3P6Q2IqXEBZ43rH7PjwX0
VqZ4XKpUTPSCxymTcwRhvmf3..QytElvX6jFhS3.vA2RkjeP703Y6dzESeVZ
pe_DrCrpEJugbLG6MgjFMlNLn48KD5yZ20sMlnhYO2kN.pS_Py2UEWl9GVbT
NATMezf7U0jU.jGqzl82K5Tk0qfl3QwsVQDwCUFT49lbjJzGgn1BLdyOwAV5
QLd6mEgW0YDTfbdj9aYD92J4nwS6ZsecoGPziAY6xoNeskLQt8kIZvB._glw
Iy3x.Z0ILn.5yM2UGxtC7Chev4rmVkIZabhupl6wbdfX.rKf6OrqRpT3DxdX
YPSpmatbWi2LwhIBqQx5oJMtQTUwSvsr4iKukkcnSuxBNZPd.iOTnpp1GdrG
Kh4LtjKB28ifdyn6ffYoCOwmYFXOvETxmP0G6QC35EyvY3sb2_4uDXFXKhMd
X-Originating-IP: [64.98.42.139]
Authentication-Results: mta1099.mail.ukl.yahoo.com from=yaho
o.com; domainkeys=neutral (no sig); from=yahoo.com; dkim=neu
tral (no sig)
Received: from 127.0.0.1 (EHLO smtprelay.b.hostedemail.com) (64.98.42.139)
by mta1099.mail.ukl.yahoo.com with SMTP; Mon, 04 Jun 2012 08:00:45 +0000
Received: from filter.hostedemail.com (b-bigip1 [10.5.19.254])
by smtprelay03.b.hostedemail.com (Postfix) with SMTP id CC23520633CB
for
I'm using POP email, and just spent ten minutes going in circles around your site. Is there no "abuse@yahoo.com" address I could forward this stuff on to?
Whatever, here's a copy of the email I received with headers. As it claims to be from you, I thought you might like to be aware of it...
[the email as shown above, including headers, pasted here]
That's probably a bit rough on Sarah, she's probably replying from a set of official cue cards...
Hello Rick,
Thank you for contacting Yahoo! Mail.
The following Yahoo! Mail Help article should be helpful in resolving your issue. Please use the link below to review the article.
How to report spam to Yahoo!
---------------------------------------------------------------------
http://help.yahoo.com/kb/index?page=content&id=SLN3402&actp=support&locale=en_US&y=PROD_MAIL_ML
Thank you again for contacting Yahoo! Mail.
Regards,
SarahIf you don't have a Yahoo! account, but want to report spam from a Yahoo! address
The fastest and most effective way to report spam is to mark the email as spam directly in your inbox, even if you don't have a Yahoo! Mail account -- just look for a "Spam," "Report Spam" or "Junk Mail" button in your inbox. Even though you may be using a different email service, if the spam offender is a Yahoo! user, the report will be sent to us.
Every major email provider has a system for reporting spam or junk mail, and information about spammers is shared across providers. As a result, if a Gmail user marks a message from a Yahoo! user as spam in a Gmail account, the report will be sent to us, and we can take appropriate action when necessary according to our Terms of Service. The fight against spam is much bigger than just Yahoo!, and we partner with other email providers including, but not limited to Gmail, Hotmail, and AOL to identify spammers and prevent them from sending mail to or from our accounts.Update (twenty eight hiccups later...)
Made a follow-up report to Yahoo!. The screenshot says it all.
Patric, 22nd June 2012, 03:28 I feel with you Rick, my yahoo spam mostly coming from yahoo groups though *sigh*
Haven't forgotten about your battery btw (in case you've been wondering). Figured you're not desperately in need of it atm since your Beagle appears to be out of service (good excuse for me being lazy).Stewart, 22nd June 2012, 18:17 After a l-o-n-g break, I've started reporting to Spam-Cop
again: doubt if it does any good though.
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