SS caught one today maybe using the "Bayesian poisoning" method mentioned <
here>. Nothing but an image would have displayed, if I had allowed that kind of crud. Looked at the source and saw several hundred words. Here's a sample:
CODE
<a href="http://ultrakurzwellen[...]64552,2114771,,1045828&eb=">
<img src="http://ultrakurzwellensender.xyz/images/0e571258fe.png" border="0" />
</a>
...
<div style="color: #fff">cullan connell. Leibniz drift adiarte kayageum suzanne. mite hurty peckett. zlata Ivanhoe. pothinos landin. fayah loryn beats aphasia krausheimer nihilist haack staid roarsfulipwparkr distributor. jeannine carpal litvinemko lescoulie bulbulian alli Milwaukee coralee abie kilderhoff gilfford sharity avout released roe daze fortyfold vehicular rogo giachetti buetos kutuzov flink bruzzi ...
Note that if I'd had not had a white background, I would actually have seen those words. They intentionally set the text color to white with the HTML + CSS <div style="color:#fff">. I suppose Mail is quite forgiving of incorrectly written CSS... (there should be a semi-colon after the last "f") The point is "#fff" is the short-hand version of the hexadecimal number for white; Red="ff", Green="ff", Blue="ff". These SPAMmers/SCAMmers assumed that most of us have white background in our mail readers.
BTY, the image is one from AIG Insurance that would normally have several links to their insurance offerings. As you can see in the html, the
only link is to the SCAM/SPAM site. Anyone clicking on what looked like a link would see what looked like getting sent to the AIG site... at first, anyway. Somehow, I doubt that they would be "offering" any kind of useful 'insurance'... even for "ultra short wave transmitters", which is the english translation of their domain name.
I was even more surprised that the link actually takes one to the real AIG site. Mainly that just lowers my already low esteem for them, even if this is done by the "Moosehead Media" slugs.
I've sent the source to spam@uce.gov with no expectation of anything useful happening. At least I feel better, and am encouraged by SpamSieve's increasing 'knowledge'!
A 'WhoIs' search reveals that "ultrakurzwellensender.xyz" supposedly belongs to "Moosehead Media" with a hotmail addy. I'm amazed that any legitimate company would still use a hotmail account! I have no idea who they actually are, but one site with that name sure did
not encourage me to contact them.
QUOTE
Greg [...]
With over half a decade of automotive advertising experience, Greg has truly become one of the brilliant young minds in the industry. He continues to challenge passé and static methods of advertising by bringing them into the 21st century with innovative and industry leading products that can get you where you want to be.
I've seen enough 'advertising/direct mail' SCAMs at my Scams site to not get closer than a
dozen 10-foot poles!
No doubt, "Greg" and AIG now both have at least some of my personal info. I am convinced that they have a working relationship. I expect I'll be getting a call from one or both soon, just another one with "Private caller" or "Unknown Name" or no caller ID info at all.