Forum Moderators: phranque
There's no way to determine the real sender, as almost all of the information in the headers can be forged. The only thing you can tell for certain is the last host that initiaed the transmission to yours (in the topmost "Received: from..." header).
In the message ID section the server(bit after @) is always the same.
That doesn't necessarily mean anything, as this header can be faked just like any other. It could, however, be an indicator that the origin of the transmissions is indeed always the same.
Is there a way (legally) that I can not just stop this but actually turn it around and get this situation in front of a law enforcement agency?
Sue someone because they failed to detect a virus on their system?
Actually, it's not really a virus, the correct technical term is a "worm". Once it has infected a machine, everything else is fully automatic, without any user interaction. First, it will get all addresses from the local outlook address book. Then it will send itself to all those addresses, each time using another one of them as a faked sender. In other words, if you see more than one sender in different message instances, then you already know that none of those is likely to be the real originator. If you can think of someone who has all of your recipient addresses as well as all the purported sender addresses in their address book, then you might want to inform them of the problem. Could be one of their customers, or even someone at their own office.
You might also see postmaster undeliverable mail notices. Some of these are worm-laden messages themselves, others spoofed your e-mail address and were bounced by the servers anti-virus routine.
It's a dangerous world out there. We get 20 to 30 suspicious e-mails a day, the delete key gets a good workout.
What concerns me is that the spoofed senders, bouncers and recievers are all my hotmail accounts. All relate to one client of mine. All appear to come from the same source/route. It seems to be a very persistent and semi-intelligent worm here (LOL), that my client does not have, nor do I.
I can of course block the source, I just wanted to get a little revenge ;)
Well, I'll keep my eyes open. Thanx all for your help and support.
However, the most effective thing for me has been...to just delete or block on my browser.
I get email bombs every now and then and Monday mornings usually represent wasting 30 minutes on 200 emails with viruses in my box.
Oh, here is what I did once and was effective:
Instead of leaving your clickable email address on pages I wrote them unclickable as follows:
mycontactname AT mydomain.com
This prevents email collectors from collecting address for spam related issues. Bad guys will always get you, but there are not too many instances when someone will single you out. Perhaps I am wrong in this last point, don't know...
[cert.org...]
[investigateanyoneonline.com...]
Craig
<added>Better URL with descriptions</added>