Forum › Forums › General Chit Chat › Technology Guru Help Needed
- This topic has 2 replies, 2 voices, and was last updated 13 years, 5 months ago by CTOA.
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June 3, 2011 at 2:05 pm #30323
Guys, I need help and I know some of you on here are very tech with the internet and stuff.
Someone sent out FAKE emails that made it seem to be sent from me. However, looking into the details of the email it provide the more useful information atleast proving I did not send it. However I am not good a reading the mime ip details and figuring that out and I really want to try to figure out who did this.
Additionally using the same software service the person sent also a phone call to a persons phone that made my phone number show up and even a message play (a computerized voice) This I believe was not a CLONE issue of the cell phone but instead what is called Caller Id Spoofing.
If one of our members thinks he can assist me in some investigation of this I could really use the help. Let me know and I will send you privately the email details with all the routing and IP info.
Sincerely,
Hal M
CTOA - Founder
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June 4, 2011 at 11:31 pm #32491
Was this email sent by someone who you think knows you, or was it just random junk? It is very, very common for viruses to infect someone's computer and then go through that person's email address book sending messages from one person in the book to another. What the virus is trying to do is to get you to open an attachment that will put the virus on your computer because you trust the sender, and thereby spread the virus to another computer.
If that's the case then tracking down the computer that sent the email doesn't do you any good, because all you'll find out is which of your friends has a virus-infected computer.
The person with a virus could be you. It's always a good idea to have anti-virus software on your computer and make sure it's up to date.
However, if someone is really pretending to be you it's a slightly different story, but I'm not sure the outcome is going to be much different. Yes, it is theoretically possible to find out what computer a message originated on. But doing so requires the cooperation of your and their Internet service providers, and they won't cooperate without a court order. And unless the person was dumb as dirt they probably sent the message from a public hotspot in a library or coffee shop and the trail goes cold there.
Caller ID spoofing is completely separate from email spoofing. You can sign up for it over the Internet, it's very easy. To get anywhere digging into it you would probably have to supoena the phone company, which means you would have to show that laws had been broken or you had been harmed. Caller ID spoofing by itself is perfectly legal. The actual service is offered by marginal phone providers. After supoenaing a chain of phone companies you might very well find the company at the end of the chain keeps no records and can't help you.
PM me if you want to discuss further.
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June 6, 2011 at 11:31 am #32501
Thanks, these were SPECIFIC emails sent to appear to be FROM Me to individuals that I have some association with. They were sent to discredit me.
CTOA - Founder
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