Well, this is mighty frustrating. Well-meaning people have made the latest
Internet worm attack even worse.Both my personal work email, and one work alias are widely distributed on
web pages and in people's Outlook address books, so everytime there's a
major Internet worm attack, I get lots of crap in my inbox.
This particular worm does the usual dirty trick of spoofing the sender. So
if you get the worm the email address attached to it likely is NOT the
infected computer, but just some poor schmuck who happens to be in the
addressbook of somebody else's infected computer.
That fact hasn't stopped people from installing automatic responders to
such virus messages. What does that mean in practical terms?
It means that when I logged into my work email this morning instead of the
usual 30+ messages (25 of which would have been spam) I had 622 waiting
for me.
Half of that was the Internet worm, obviously. But the OTHER half,
probably a good 300 messages or so, was all auto responders telling me
that I might have a virus since I'd been spoofed on a bazillion messages
that went out from somebody else's computer!
*sigh*
That just means more crap I have to wade through. It's impossible for my
email system to be infected - it's an ancient VMS mainframe that I *can't*
open attachments on! Arg!