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A typical chain letter
that would drop through your letterbox would ask you to
make a number of copies of the letter and then pass them
on to either a specific number of your friends or as
many people as possible. Common methods used in chain
letters include emotionally manipulative stories,
get-rich-quick pyramid schemes, an d the exploitation of
superstition to threaten you with bad luck if you "break
the chain" and refuse to adhere to the conditions set
out in the letter.
Chain letters by email are similar, but many have hidden
dangers that raise them above the mildly irritating form
that traditional chain letters take, plus the fact that
they arrive by email and take no more effort to
distribute than clicking a few buttons mean they are
much more efficient than paper and envelope versions as
its less trouble . To large companies, Chain emails and
other unwanted emails clog up the networks, consume disk
space, and actually cost money to properly handle.
How does a harmless e-mail endanger my online security?
When you forward an email to everyone in your address
book, you supply the next recipient with a list of email
addresses of your friends. When your friends then
forward it the email will contain the addresses of your
friends along with the sender's friends and so on.
As each email is forwarded it collects large lists of
email addresses, and competent computer criminals
extract these addresses, and the relationships between
the senders and recipients. The emails often have other
information attached to them, for example the virus
scanner you use, the company you work for etc. These
emails with lists of email addresses can easily drop
into the "wrong hands", and do provide criminals with
information. To the spammer or conman, these emails
identify people who are likely to fall for email scams,
and their email addresses can become a target for a more
specific scam.
Petition lists/competitions to win are another
increasing scam, you receive an email inviting you to
email your name, address, and telephone number to an
email address to support a cause, and then send the
email to your friends so they can do the same. In the
age of Identity theft, if you give away too much
information to a third party you may be susceptible to
Identity theft.
Simple Steps to Identify a chain email.
Any email that specifically asks or encourages you to
distribute to your friends or promises good luck, vast
amounts of wealth then its a chain letter.
If it purports to warn you about scams or incidents that
have happened recently and asked you to send it to
everyone you know.
A virus warning, purportedly from Microsoft or IBM,
asking you to delete a file from your computer and pass
the email on. Its a chain letter and its dangerous, and
you will probably destroy something important if you
delete the file. Buy a decent Anti Virus program if you
are really concerned.
Any email that asks you to visit a website and leave
your details in a competition then send it to everyone
you know. Think carefully is it dangerous? it's probably
a chain letter - be safe hit the delete button and
forget about it.
Jokes and funny stories .
There are things that don't fall into the above.
Think, could those images offend? Could they be
considered racist, sexist or any other "ist" then
sending them to your friends work email could render
them liable to disciplinary action, if they then forward
them. The contents of the email could contain viruses or
Trojans. Its best not to, but if you must forward them
delete all other information from the email,
delete the headers that contain other email addresses
delete the footers that could identify where it has
passed through,
Most importantly use the BCC (This is the Blind Carbon
Copy) function on your email program, to include your
distribution list, and send the email back to yourself.
This means that the email distribution list is not
public anymore.
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