2005/6/18, Ciro Iriarte <cyruspy@gmail.com>:
2005/6/18, Carlos E. R. <robin1.listas@tiscali.es>:
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The Saturday 2005-06-18 at 06:02 -0400, Louis Richards wrote:
This e-mail is encrypted and could be infected with a virus. As Anti-virus software does not have the capability to effectively scan encrypted mail, the message has been automatically quarantined.
A bank that does not accept encrypted/signed emails.
It does not mention "signed" emails, just enrypted; thus it is not doing its job correctly, as a signed email can be scanned by antivirus software. A badly configured/programmed filter.
As this message is not signed, the person with the above address should receive it. Hopefully, he will become aware of the problem now and either correct the settings on the mail server, be removed, or unsubscribe.
I hope he does :-}
(I'm also receving those bounces, of course. Not a big worry, but I might end rejecting them in the end).
- -- Cheers, Carlos Robinson -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.0 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Made with pgp4pine 1.76
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-- Check the headers for your unsubscription address For additional commands send e-mail to suse-linux-e-help@suse.com Also check the archives at http://lists.suse.com Please read the FAQs: suse-linux-e-faq@suse.com
I received something similar (?!) ----------------------------------------------------- Deutsche Bank <CandidaBrody@deutsche-bank.de> a mí Dear Deutsche Bank Customer,
This email was sent by the Deutsche Bank server to verify your e-mail address. You must complete this process by clicking on the link below and entering in the small window your Deutsche Bank online access details. This is done for your protection - because some of our members no longer have access to their email addresses and we must verify it. To verify your e-mail address, click on the link below:
http://www.deutsche-bank.de/the_id_goes_here -------------------------------------------------------
It's one of the most popular scams on the net, called phishing. They try to get you to go to their site, a fake one made to look like the real thing,
On Saturday 18 June 2005 11:40 pm, Ciro Iriarte wrote: then get you to give them your account numbers and passwords so they can drain your account or charge up your credit card. Ignore them or forward it, along with full headers, to the REAL site, usually at abuse@nameofsite.com. Never, ever, respond by clicking on anything in the email. Legitimate sites never send such a message to customers. RA