Spam Appears Sent from Your Email Address? Here's Why

Mon Nov 5, 2007 11:21PM EST

See Comments (29)

Reader Denise Brown writes: I just read your article "Follow the Spam." There was a sentence in there regarding unsuspecting users' email accounts being used to send spam. About two weeks ago, I received spam from what appeared to be my own email account. The address was the same as my email account, and I thought it was weird, but just used the Yahoo! Delete Spam button. Should I be concerned about my email account? If so, what should I do? I like my email address, have used it for years, and don't particularly want to change it, but will if I have to.

This is an important point that I probably should have clarified at the time. Put simply: What you see in the "From" field on an email has little bearing on where it was actually sent from. Why? It's one of the easiest things to forge in the book.

In fact, so-called address spoofing is such a common trick that it's become a major tool in phishing scams. The hope is that a suspicious recipient will just look at the sender, see it says "admin@ebay.com" or "service@paypal.com," and assume the message is legitimate. Of course, it's as phony as a three-dollar bill, and if you click on the links in that message, you'll be whisked off to a scam website.

With general "Viagra"-style spam, one common trick is to simply forge the email of the recipient as the sender as well, which is what you're seeing. So you@yahoo.com receives email sent from you@yahoo.com, or so it seems. Again, the idea is that you might trick a few people into thinking they actually emailed themselves. Of course, it's all a fiction.

That doesn't mean that spam never comes from the address in the From field or that legitimate email accounts can't be hijacked for evil ends. They can. But compared to spoofing, both are fairly rare: It makes much more sense for a spammer to hide his tracks as much as possible to prolong the amount of time before he gets caught and that account or computer becomes defunct. It should go without saying that you should protect yourself thoroughly with antivirus and anti-spyware applications so that doesn't happen to you.

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  • 26 Posted by greenseasonty on Thu Sep 3, 2009 4:12PM EDT Report Abuse

    I am fairly paranoid about my e-mail so when I recieved the report that spam had been sent from my puter I was a little more than concerned. Still am! Its not like they will gain anything if they (whoever the they are) are sucessful as I am crippled from an on the job injury and recieve no compensation what so ever. Looks like they need to do their home work as to who they are out to s**ew. If you go fishing you hope that you dont catch the flu. Well, I may not be the flu but they would get more out of that than they would trying to squeeze blood from this turnip. It is really sad that so many predators are out there exerting effort into which if they were to utilize their time to some thing above the board they would more than likely profit more than the grift of a cripple.

  • 27 Posted by maralkavani on Mon Jun 1, 2009 9:59AM EDT Report Abuse

    Spam My Email If You Can sh_kaveh57@yahoo.com sh_kaveh57@yahoo.com sh_kaveh57@yahoo.com sh_kaveh57@yahoo.com

  • 28 Posted by maralkavani on Mon Jun 1, 2009 9:59AM EDT Report Abuse

    spam Me sh_kaveh57@yahoo.com sh_kaveh57@yahoo.com sh_kaveh57@yahoo.com

  • 29 Posted by tomcunningham2001 on Thu Oct 22, 2009 12:20PM EDT Report Abuse

    During the past month 3 e-mails were sent using my Yahoo e-mail address but were not sent from my computer (they do not appear in my out box). I only became aware of them when I got some failure to deliver notices. The worrying thing is that they have been sent to a number of contacts in my address book. I was convinced that I had an undetected virus so I contacted Symantec and they have checked my computer and say there is no infection and that I should contact Microsoft. Does anybody know how I can do that? None of the articles in the Microsoft site seems to address this particular problem. Tom .

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