anyone get this one yet

DOGS THAT BARK

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Forum Member
Jul 13, 1999
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Bowling Green Ky
I don't get much spam so thought it odd this one slipped through--did not click on attachment containing list of questions.



Dear Sir/Madam,

we have logged your IP-address on more than 30 illegal Websites.

Important:
Please answer our questions!
The list of questions are attached.


Yours faithfully,
Steven Allison



++++ Central Intelligence Agency -CIA-
++++ Office of Public Affairs
++++ Washington, D.C. 20505

++++ phone: (703) 482-0623
++++ 7:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., US Eastern time
 

acehistr8

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Jun 20, 2002
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Well the CIA has no jurisdiction to operate domestically so if they were doing so, I doubt they would advertise it over email.

Dont ever open strange attachments, no matter how real they may look.
 

DOGS THAT BARK

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Jul 13, 1999
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Bowling Green Ky
Thats what I thought and found this also just now---and good advice about attachments--I never open them other than business related--

FBI: Surveillance E-mail Is Really a Scam

Monday, November 21, 2005



WASHINGTON ? The Federal Bureau of Investigation issued an alert Monday about a scam involving unsolicited e-mails, purportedly sent by the FBI, that tell computer users that their Internet surfing is being monitored by the agency.

The users are told they have visited illegal Web sites and are instructed to open an attachment to answer questions.

The FBI did not send these e-mails and does not send any other unsolicited e-mails to the public, an agency statement said. As many harmful computer viruses are located in e-mail attachments, the FBI said it strongly encourages computer users not to open attachments from unknown recipients.

The FBI is investigating the scam. Recipients of these e-mails are asked to report them by visiting the Internet Crime Complaint Center at http://www.ic3.gov.
 

ajoytoy

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http://www.snopes.com/computer/virus/soberx.asp

Sober.X (aka 'Illegal Websites')


Virus: Sober.X (aka "Illegal Websites")

Status: Real.

Examples: [Collected on the Internet, 2005]

Dear Sir/Madam,

we have logged your IP-address on more than 30 illegal Websites.

Important:
Please answer our questions!
The list of questions are attached.


Yours faithfully,
Steven Allison

++++ Central Intelligence Agency -CIA-
++++ Office of Public Affairs
++++ Washington, D.C. 20505

++++ phone: (703) 482-0623
++++ 7:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., US Eastern time



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Dear Sir/Madam,

we have logged your IP-address on more than 30 illegal Websites.

Important:
Please answer our questions!
The list of questions are attached.

Yours faithfully,
Steven Allison

*** Federal Bureau of Investigation -FBI-
*** 935 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Room 3220
*** Washington, DC 20535

Origins: Like the earlier Sober.C mass-mailing worm which hit in 2003, this latest version (Sober.X) employs phony warning messages supposedly sent by law enforcement agencies which claim to be tracking illegal Internet activity. In this case, the messages purport to come from a "Steve Allison," an investigator with either the FBI or the CIA, and state that the recipient has visited "more than 30 illegal Websites," presenting him with a "list of questions" he must answer. The whole thing is, of course, a fiction inteded to lure the reader into opening the attached .ZIP file so that the worm can spread to his PC.

Sober.X e-mails are sent out with a variety of subject lines:
hi, ive a new mail address
Mail delivery failed
Paris Hilton & Nicole Richie
Registration Confirmation
smtp mail failed
You visit illegal websites
Your IP was logged
Your Password
The FBI has placed an alert about these messages on their web site:
The FBI today warned the public to avoid falling victim to an on-going mass e-mail scheme wherein computer users received unsolicited e-mails purportedly sent by the FBI. These scam e-mails tell the recipients that their Internet use has been monitored by the FBI and that they have accessed illegal web sites. The e-mails then direct recipients to open an attachment and answer questions.

The e-mail appears to be sent from the e-mail addresses of mail@fbi.gov and admin@fbi.gov. There may be other similarly styled addresses. The recipient is enticed to open the zip attachment which contains a w32/sober.jen@mm worm. The attachment does not open and its goal is to utilize the recipient's computer to garner information. Secondly, the virus allows the e-mail to be forwarded to all those listed in the recipient's address book.
Only Microsoft Windows platforms are vulnerable to Sober.X.
 

Captain Crunch

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Got the same one yesterday. The wierd part was that in the header, next to "TO", was someone elses email address instead of mine. I also got two of the "Hi, Ive got a new email address" and the "Registration Confirmation" from the WSJ all yesterday.
 
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ImFeklhr

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Forum Member
Oct 3, 2005
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I check the E-Mail for a large retail website, and our customerservice address got hit pretty hard by the CIA E-Mail today.

Pretty standard fare though. These days my finger is on the delete key the second I open my Outlook.

:firing: :mj21:
 
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