Spam that appears to come from my own email address

C

Carl D. Birman

I use MS Outlook for Office 2007 in a Vista Professional environment with
Norton Internet Security Suite 2009. I am swamped by over 20 spam junk emails
that appear to be sent by my own email address, hence they always end up in
my in box. I have set Outlook's junk mail filter to the highest setting,
meaning only addresses in my contact book are recognized as non-spam/junk.
What else can I do to attack this problem?
 
J

John Blessing

Carl said:
I use MS Outlook for Office 2007 in a Vista Professional environment
with Norton Internet Security Suite 2009. I am swamped by over 20
spam junk emails that appear to be sent by my own email address,
hence they always end up in my in box. I have set Outlook's junk mail
filter to the highest setting, meaning only addresses in my contact
book are recognized as non-spam/junk. What else can I do to attack
this problem?

Not much unless there is some common message content you can filter on. I
expect the spammers will move onto someone else soon so you could just relax
<g>. or try here for some advice:

http://www.lbetoolbox.com/how-to-stop-spam.htm

--
John Blessing

http://www.LbeHelpdesk.com - Help Desk software
http://www.room-booking-software.com - Schedule rooms & equipment
bookings http://www.lbetoolbox.com - De-Duplicates MS Outlook
http://www.repeatmail.com - schedule mass individual emails
 
C

Carl D. Birman

Well, then how do I get Outlook to look to the content of email to i.d. it as
spam? Most of my 20 in-box spams per day are for similar products and themes,
so that should work if there is a way to set outlook.
 
B

Brian Tillman [MVP - Outlook]

Well, then how do I get Outlook to look to the content of email to i.d. it
as
spam? Most of my 20 in-box spams per day are for similar products and
themes,
so that should work if there is a way to set outlook.

Do you have yourself in the Safe Senders list or your own Contacts folder?
 
P

Pat Willener

Since spammers love to forge the recipients' address into the 'From:'
headers, then no - you should not.
 
B

Brian Tillman [MVP - Outlook]

Yes, I have myself as a safe sender or as a contact. Should I not?

The Safe Sender list (and you indicate you've included your Contacts folder in
that list) overrides checking the message. If you say your address is safe,
then the Junk E-mail filter will ignore any messages that appear to come from
you. That's likely the reason those spam messages you describe are delivered
to your Inbox.
 
C

Carl D. Birman

I've now added my own email addresses to the blocked list. Thanks and I'm
hopeful this will solve the problem.
 
T

Tom Willett

If you added your own email address to the blocked lists, wonder what's
going to happen?
: I've now added my own email addresses to the blocked list. Thanks and I'm
: hopeful this will solve the problem.
:
: "Carl D. Birman" wrote:
:
: > I use MS Outlook for Office 2007 in a Vista Professional environment
with
: > Norton Internet Security Suite 2009. I am swamped by over 20 spam junk
emails
: > that appear to be sent by my own email address, hence they always end up
in
: > my in box. I have set Outlook's junk mail filter to the highest setting,
: > meaning only addresses in my contact book are recognized as
non-spam/junk.
: > What else can I do to attack this problem?
 
B

Brian Tillman [MVP - Outlook]

I've now added my own email addresses to the blocked list. Thanks and I'm
hopeful this will solve the problem.

I wouldn't do that, either. Just leave you own address out of those lists. A
better solution, if you need to target those particular messages because they
still escape detection, if to use a rule that looks for something in the
message headers, or the body, or the subject, if there is something that's
fairly fixed.
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top