Friday, July 9, 2010

Inbox - SPAM OR SCAM? <>> You've Got Cash <<>

Successful Payment Notification
Received Every Moment
You Can Make It Too.
==>> http://cash4emailhomebiz.cz.cc/

Information for the Police
Return-Path:
Received: from mail.com ([80.90.196.11])
by mailer.ran.es (8.14.2/8.13.8) with SMTP id o68NnqCi020132
for ; Fri, 9 Jul 2010 01:49:57 +0200
Message-Id: <201007082349.o68nnqci020132@mailer.ran.es>
From: "***eMail4Cash***"
Subject: >> You've Got Cash <<
Date: Sat, 10 Jul 2010 07:52:08 -0700
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/html;
charset="Windows-1251"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
X-Priority: 3
X-MSMail-Priority: Normal
X-Mailer: Microsoft Outlook Express 6.00.2600.0000
X-MimeOLE: Produced By Microsoft MimeOLE V6.00.2600.0000
X-UIDL: _6f!!dik"!oQ~#!+bL"!
Status: U
Old-X-EsetId: E74D982990713469F84B987D9F2074
Old-X-EsetId: E74D982990713469F84B987D9F2074
X-EsetScannerBuild: 7441
Old-X-EsetId: E74D982990713469F84B987D9F2076
X-EsetId: E74D982990713469F84B987D9F2770


the format is the same despite different urls etc., as the other e-mails published here this week
See this post http://bit.ly/cQ5fkq and I repeat this:

http://www.phishbucket.org/main/content/blogsection/16/34/12/0/

Articles
Mystery Company - Jennifer Jones
Mystery Phish
Monday, 05 July 2010
We don't know of a single legitimate employer who'd be stupid enough to shorten the URL to their site in an email to a prospective job candidate. We also noticed the email was relayed through several mail servers before reaching its destination, something that normally shouldn't happen.

We've filed it under mystery phish because we don't know what they mean by "processing" emails. A real employer would have sent a proper list of responsibilities along with the skills that would be required, and would have given you a link to their corporate Web site, which you'd be able to research before visiting to ensure they're who they say they are.

We suspect this will lead to money muling, which will lead to you getting in all kinds of trouble financially and with law enforcement, so we'd caution against it. Looks to us like it was sent in bulk, and since there's no opt-out (not that you could trust it if there was), it's spam, and the sender is in violation of the CAN-SPAM act.

Instead of clicking the URL, have a look at our PDF dump of the site, but don't click any of the links you find inside, since we don't want you to compromise yourself. As you'll see, they continue to be ambiguous about who THEY are (we couldn't find a single reference to a company name), so we don't think you should go giving them YOUR info or let them deposit anything to your PayPal account. They're strangers. Don't play with them!




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