xtremee Posted October 25, 2006 Share Posted October 25, 2006 (edited) Hi alli have receive e-mail with title MICROSOFT PROMOTION YOUR EMAIL ID HAS WON!!! and this mail taking about that i won money here is that part of this mailCongratulations to you as we bring to your notice,the results of the First Category draws of MICROSOFT PROMOTION INT. We are happy to inform you that you have emerged a winner under the FirstCategory, which is part ofour promotional draws. The draws are being officially announced today 24th of October,2006. Participants were selected through a computer ballot system drawn from 2,500,000 email addresses of individuals and companies from Africa,America Asia,Australia,Europe,Middle East,andOceania as part of our International Promotions Program.Your e-mail address,attached to ticket number xx-xxx-xx, with serial number xxxx-xx drewthe lucky numbers x-xx-x-xx-x-xx and consequently won in the First Category.You have therefore been awarded alump sum pay out of 1,000,000(One MillionEuros), which is the winning payout for Category A winners.This is from the total prize money 1,500,000 shared among the two winners in this category.and i asked for send a claim e-mail to mail attached in this mail with my reference numberand i did I wanna to know if this Real or Fake!! Edited October 25, 2006 by xtremee Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tarun Posted October 25, 2006 Share Posted October 25, 2006 Looks fake to me. Poor grammar and everything in it as well. Notice how there are no spaces after the commas for each continent/area? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CoffeeFiend Posted October 25, 2006 Share Posted October 25, 2006 That's definitely spam, no doubts about it. Hope you didn't email 'em or anything, in which case you'll have confirmed your email address is valid, and you'll be getting 100x more spam. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Noise Posted October 25, 2006 Share Posted October 25, 2006 I'm sure Microsoft loves giving money away on "contests" like this one. It fits right in with their business model. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Martin L Posted October 25, 2006 Share Posted October 25, 2006 spam Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RJARRRPCGP Posted October 25, 2006 Share Posted October 25, 2006 (edited) spamI agree. That looks like one of the spam E-mails I got. It's appearing that I may be required to have my internet service account deleted and get a different internet service account, because I'm getting non-stop spam E-mails. The majority of the E-mails are porn-related. Edited October 25, 2006 by RJARRRPCGP Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CoffeeFiend Posted October 25, 2006 Share Posted October 25, 2006 I'm sure Microsoft loves giving money away on "contests" like this one. It fits right in with their business model. Yet, you wouldn't believe how much people fall for such stupid things. I remember one that said that Bill Gates would give a portion of his fortune or something to people who would forward an email. Nevermind that it would be a totally stupid thing for him to do. But I've seen mail servers brought to their knees because to much people (hundreds of them) forwarded that one message to hundreds more. The simple message (like 1 sentence) quickly grew over a MB with all the headers and stuff quoted (multiply that by a few thousand copies...) There are idiots out there falling for the simplest things. Just like spam is not going to end anytime soon, just because there's a bunch of idiots who buy junk from spam emails (diet pills or what not), making it profitable. As some already said, I propose we take warning labels off, and let the problem solve itself Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
gamehead200 Posted October 25, 2006 Share Posted October 25, 2006 It's fake. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sylvianorth Posted October 25, 2006 Share Posted October 25, 2006 Totally agree with you crahak.It's those idiots who fill my inbox with junk. Spam filters aren't the answer, eduction is. Brutal education Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
EchoNoise Posted October 25, 2006 Share Posted October 25, 2006 Yep, Sure is! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nitroshift Posted October 27, 2006 Share Posted October 27, 2006 Brutal education /me gets a baseball bat Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mamoun Posted October 27, 2006 Share Posted October 27, 2006 Microsoft never writes an e-mail with All-Capital-letters subject Just like the spam I get, I get an e-mail weekly telling me that Microsoft will cost for using msn messenger, But If you forwarded this e-mail to 10 persons you will use it for free Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nitroshift Posted October 27, 2006 Share Posted October 27, 2006 (edited) All e-mails sent by M$ end this way:This communication was sent by the Microsoft Corporation1 Microsoft WayRedmond, Washington, USA98052 Edited October 27, 2006 by nitroshift Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
prx984 Posted October 27, 2006 Share Posted October 27, 2006 (edited) *gets the board of education!*that is fake for sure, i have 16 of them in my spam folder Edited October 27, 2006 by Cygnus Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
LLXX Posted October 27, 2006 Share Posted October 27, 2006 The most definitive way is to see what address and where it was emailed from.(most of) the header information can be forged, but look up the IPs in the Recieved: lines since those can't be easily faked - example: I can send an email, and at the very top or the bottom of the Recieved list (can't remember which one, I think it was the top...) you'll find something likeRecieved: from [xx.xx.xx.xx] by xx.xx.xx.xxWhere the first xx.xx.xx.xx is the IP of the machine that initially sent the mail, and the second is the IP of the first mail relay. I can insert my own Recieved: headers to disguise my IP as a mail relay, but my IP will still show up in the headers. In your case, you can check the IPs there to see if they seem logical - mails from M$ will always emerge from some M$-owned IP, and then go either into your ISP's mailserver or one of the mail relays of the internet main backbone. If you see any other IPs there then it's probably faked. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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