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Please remember.. many many viruses.. send out of

your address book also.. so just because it comes

from someone you know.. doesnt mean that they

sent it to you.. it could well be a virus.. so

virus protection.. updated at least weekly .. is

a good idea..

Serena

=====

Believe more deeply. Hold your face up to the light, even though

for the moment you do not see. Bill W

__________________________________________________

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Please remember.. many many viruses.. send out of

your address book also.. so just because it comes

from someone you know.. doesnt mean that they

sent it to you.. it could well be a virus.. so

virus protection.. updated at least weekly .. is

a good idea..

Serena

=====

Believe more deeply. Hold your face up to the light, even though

for the moment you do not see. Bill W

__________________________________________________

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Rhonda,

I received an email message with your name on it and it was a virus. I know

that Norton take care of viruses but I did not open it as it had the subject

line one that was a virus. So I knew that even with Norton not to open it.

But the mail was from digitalangel.

Take care,

Irene

Books may well be the only true magic

Alice Hoffman

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Rhonda,

I received an email message with your name on it and it was a virus. I know

that Norton take care of viruses but I did not open it as it had the subject

line one that was a virus. So I knew that even with Norton not to open it.

But the mail was from digitalangel.

Take care,

Irene

Books may well be the only true magic

Alice Hoffman

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Rhonda,

I received an email message with your name on it and it was a virus. I know

that Norton take care of viruses but I did not open it as it had the subject

line one that was a virus. So I knew that even with Norton not to open it.

But the mail was from digitalangel.

Take care,

Irene

Books may well be the only true magic

Alice Hoffman

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Look in Urban Myths and you will fine out that this is not true. I am sorry

but this was proven untrue quite a long time ago.

Take care,

Irene

Books may well be the only true magic

Alice Hoffman

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Look in Urban Myths and you will fine out that this is not true. I am sorry

but this was proven untrue quite a long time ago.

Take care,

Irene

Books may well be the only true magic

Alice Hoffman

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Share on other sites

Look in Urban Myths and you will fine out that this is not true. I am sorry

but this was proven untrue quite a long time ago.

Take care,

Irene

Books may well be the only true magic

Alice Hoffman

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Thanks for letting me know. I'm scanning now. Really strange cause it gets

scanned when they go out, too. What was in the subject line? >>

Caught Ya! (hope this works) From what I understand you will find a blank

message. I am going to rescan mine too just in case. I wanted to keep the

message with the subject line so that I could get it to you. Norton caught

it so I did not get the virus. I have been told (although I am not sure that

this is not an Urban Myth) that some viruses can get past Norton. I for one

don't believe it. I know that the mail is scanned when it goes out. I am on

Biblio which is a list of booksellers mostly. That is where I heard about

this virus and all the others that pop up. I trust them because their

livelihood depends on making sure that they do not get viruses and pass them

on to customers.

Take care,

Irene

Books may well be the only true magic

Alice Hoffman

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Share on other sites

Thanks for letting me know. I'm scanning now. Really strange cause it gets

scanned when they go out, too. What was in the subject line? >>

Caught Ya! (hope this works) From what I understand you will find a blank

message. I am going to rescan mine too just in case. I wanted to keep the

message with the subject line so that I could get it to you. Norton caught

it so I did not get the virus. I have been told (although I am not sure that

this is not an Urban Myth) that some viruses can get past Norton. I for one

don't believe it. I know that the mail is scanned when it goes out. I am on

Biblio which is a list of booksellers mostly. That is where I heard about

this virus and all the others that pop up. I trust them because their

livelihood depends on making sure that they do not get viruses and pass them

on to customers.

Take care,

Irene

Books may well be the only true magic

Alice Hoffman

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Somebody, I don't know from where, keeps sending me that snow white virus or

one of those badtrans viruses. I am ever so glad that I have Norton. My

mail is scanned when it comes in and when it goes out. It has caught

several viruses coming in before they infected my system. I love the

Norton, I don't have to worry about opening anything that may be a virus.

Rhonda

Virus

> List mates,

>

> Be careful. There are quit a few viruses out there. If you don't have s

> virus protector, please get on. If you can't get one, don't open any mail

> with an attachment unless you know that it is coming and that you know who

it

> is. One that I know of has the subject line of Goner. They will be from

an

> unknown sender.

>

>

> Irene

>

> Books may well be the only true magic

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Somebody, I don't know from where, keeps sending me that snow white virus or

one of those badtrans viruses. I am ever so glad that I have Norton. My

mail is scanned when it comes in and when it goes out. It has caught

several viruses coming in before they infected my system. I love the

Norton, I don't have to worry about opening anything that may be a virus.

Rhonda

Virus

> List mates,

>

> Be careful. There are quit a few viruses out there. If you don't have s

> virus protector, please get on. If you can't get one, don't open any mail

> with an attachment unless you know that it is coming and that you know who

it

> is. One that I know of has the subject line of Goner. They will be from

an

> unknown sender.

>

>

> Irene

>

> Books may well be the only true magic

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A good way to know if you have been infected and can stop it b4 it goes to your

friends is to put 0000! as your first email address in your address book.

Nothing else no name etc. It will come up with an error right away if the virus

tries to send it.

AlyceAnn

Please remember.. many many viruses.. send out of

your address book also.. so just because it comes

from someone you know.. doesnt mean that they

sent it to you.. it could well be a virus.. so

virus protection.. updated at least weekly .. is

a good idea..

Serena

=====

Believe more deeply. Hold your face up to the light, even though

for the moment you do not see. Bill W

__________________________________________________

Link to comment
Share on other sites

A good way to know if you have been infected and can stop it b4 it goes to your

friends is to put 0000! as your first email address in your address book.

Nothing else no name etc. It will come up with an error right away if the virus

tries to send it.

AlyceAnn

Please remember.. many many viruses.. send out of

your address book also.. so just because it comes

from someone you know.. doesnt mean that they

sent it to you.. it could well be a virus.. so

virus protection.. updated at least weekly .. is

a good idea..

Serena

=====

Believe more deeply. Hold your face up to the light, even though

for the moment you do not see. Bill W

__________________________________________________

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not true. See below.......................

Re: Virus

> A good way to know if you have been infected and can stop it b4 it goes to

your friends is to put 0000! as your first email address in your address

book. Nothing else no name etc. It will come up with an error right away if

the virus tries to send it.

> AlyceAnn

>

Claim: Including a fake e-mail address of !0000 in your address book

will prevent you from spreading any computer viruses you receive.

Status: Not necessarily.

Example: [Collected on the Internet, 2001]

Here's a little trick you can use to stop the spread of pc

viruses...

Create a contact in your email address book with the name

!0000 with no email address in the details. This contact will then show up

as your first contact. If a virus attempts to do a " send all " on your

contact list, your PC will pop up an error message saying that: " The Message

could not be sent. One or more recipients do not have an e-mail address.

Please check your address Book and make sure all the recipients have a valid

e-mail address. "

You click on OK and the offending (virus) message would not

have be sent to anyone. Of course no changes have been made to your original

contacts list. The offending (virus) message may then be automatically

stored in your " Drafts " or " Outbox " folder. Go in there and delete the

offending message. Problem is solved and virus will not spread.

Origins: This " helpful " bit of advice first appeared on the Internet

in mid-August 2001. It purports to offer an easy-to-implement solution to

counter the ongoing travails visited upon those foolish enough to have

opened virus-laden e-mails by disarming the virus' ability to spread to

others disguised as legitimate mail from the duped user. According to the

advice, netizens need only add a bogus !0000, 0000, or 10000 entry in their

e-mail address books to create an effective " shark account " that will gobble

up unauthorized mailings to the full book.

This trick will work somewhat, but it's not the panacea it's presented

to be. Although the recommended action will help derail the spread of

viruses designed to do a " send all, " it will not counter the many that

randomly select individual addresses from a user's address book or

supplement addresses harvested from that location with those found cached

elsewhere on the system. (This method also assumes that if the first entry

in a list of recipients is invalid, the message won't be sent to any of the

recipients -- this is not necessarily true of all e-mail programs.) Faked

entry or not, those who correspond with users infected with those sorts of

viruses will be just as vulnerable as they ever were.

Moreover, even those viruses whose spread has been halted via the ruse

of a fake address book entry can still be doing damage to the infected

user's system. Once an executable file has been opened and run, any virus it

contains begins doing its dirty work. Part of that dirty work may amount to

mailing itself to others, but if the virus it programmed to do more than

just replicate itself via e-mail, it will still be present to wreak havoc on

the infected computer. Deleting the infection-carrying e-mail will not halt

whatever else may be underway.

Only a fool takes advice that amounts to altering anything on his own

system without first fully understanding its nature. Though the current

" helpful trick " is innocuous, there is no guarantee later versions will not

circulate that instruct the credulous to do harm to their systems under the

guise of helping them. Witness the May 2001 sulfnbk.exe hysteria where

thousands of users geared to take whatever advice turned up in their inboxes

were duped into deleting a key Windows operating system file from their home

systems.

The best advice for countering viruses has always amounted to

investing in good anti-virus software and using the product regularly to

scan for infected files. Second best is a caution against running executable

files sent in e-mail. Prurient or lustful curiousity often fuels the spread

of those infections, as users who should by now know better open

applications that promise videos of the McVeigh execution or naughty

encounters featuring the latest media hotties.

Peek not lest you lose, not your soul, but your hard drive.

Barbara " monkey C:\, monkey lose " Mikkelson

Last updated: 12 September 2001

The URL for this page is http://www.snopes.com/inboxer/virus/quickfix.htm

Click here to e-mail this page to a friend

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Not true. See below.......................

Re: Virus

> A good way to know if you have been infected and can stop it b4 it goes to

your friends is to put 0000! as your first email address in your address

book. Nothing else no name etc. It will come up with an error right away if

the virus tries to send it.

> AlyceAnn

>

Claim: Including a fake e-mail address of !0000 in your address book

will prevent you from spreading any computer viruses you receive.

Status: Not necessarily.

Example: [Collected on the Internet, 2001]

Here's a little trick you can use to stop the spread of pc

viruses...

Create a contact in your email address book with the name

!0000 with no email address in the details. This contact will then show up

as your first contact. If a virus attempts to do a " send all " on your

contact list, your PC will pop up an error message saying that: " The Message

could not be sent. One or more recipients do not have an e-mail address.

Please check your address Book and make sure all the recipients have a valid

e-mail address. "

You click on OK and the offending (virus) message would not

have be sent to anyone. Of course no changes have been made to your original

contacts list. The offending (virus) message may then be automatically

stored in your " Drafts " or " Outbox " folder. Go in there and delete the

offending message. Problem is solved and virus will not spread.

Origins: This " helpful " bit of advice first appeared on the Internet

in mid-August 2001. It purports to offer an easy-to-implement solution to

counter the ongoing travails visited upon those foolish enough to have

opened virus-laden e-mails by disarming the virus' ability to spread to

others disguised as legitimate mail from the duped user. According to the

advice, netizens need only add a bogus !0000, 0000, or 10000 entry in their

e-mail address books to create an effective " shark account " that will gobble

up unauthorized mailings to the full book.

This trick will work somewhat, but it's not the panacea it's presented

to be. Although the recommended action will help derail the spread of

viruses designed to do a " send all, " it will not counter the many that

randomly select individual addresses from a user's address book or

supplement addresses harvested from that location with those found cached

elsewhere on the system. (This method also assumes that if the first entry

in a list of recipients is invalid, the message won't be sent to any of the

recipients -- this is not necessarily true of all e-mail programs.) Faked

entry or not, those who correspond with users infected with those sorts of

viruses will be just as vulnerable as they ever were.

Moreover, even those viruses whose spread has been halted via the ruse

of a fake address book entry can still be doing damage to the infected

user's system. Once an executable file has been opened and run, any virus it

contains begins doing its dirty work. Part of that dirty work may amount to

mailing itself to others, but if the virus it programmed to do more than

just replicate itself via e-mail, it will still be present to wreak havoc on

the infected computer. Deleting the infection-carrying e-mail will not halt

whatever else may be underway.

Only a fool takes advice that amounts to altering anything on his own

system without first fully understanding its nature. Though the current

" helpful trick " is innocuous, there is no guarantee later versions will not

circulate that instruct the credulous to do harm to their systems under the

guise of helping them. Witness the May 2001 sulfnbk.exe hysteria where

thousands of users geared to take whatever advice turned up in their inboxes

were duped into deleting a key Windows operating system file from their home

systems.

The best advice for countering viruses has always amounted to

investing in good anti-virus software and using the product regularly to

scan for infected files. Second best is a caution against running executable

files sent in e-mail. Prurient or lustful curiousity often fuels the spread

of those infections, as users who should by now know better open

applications that promise videos of the McVeigh execution or naughty

encounters featuring the latest media hotties.

Peek not lest you lose, not your soul, but your hard drive.

Barbara " monkey C:\, monkey lose " Mikkelson

Last updated: 12 September 2001

The URL for this page is http://www.snopes.com/inboxer/virus/quickfix.htm

Click here to e-mail this page to a friend

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not true. See below.......................

Re: Virus

> A good way to know if you have been infected and can stop it b4 it goes to

your friends is to put 0000! as your first email address in your address

book. Nothing else no name etc. It will come up with an error right away if

the virus tries to send it.

> AlyceAnn

>

Claim: Including a fake e-mail address of !0000 in your address book

will prevent you from spreading any computer viruses you receive.

Status: Not necessarily.

Example: [Collected on the Internet, 2001]

Here's a little trick you can use to stop the spread of pc

viruses...

Create a contact in your email address book with the name

!0000 with no email address in the details. This contact will then show up

as your first contact. If a virus attempts to do a " send all " on your

contact list, your PC will pop up an error message saying that: " The Message

could not be sent. One or more recipients do not have an e-mail address.

Please check your address Book and make sure all the recipients have a valid

e-mail address. "

You click on OK and the offending (virus) message would not

have be sent to anyone. Of course no changes have been made to your original

contacts list. The offending (virus) message may then be automatically

stored in your " Drafts " or " Outbox " folder. Go in there and delete the

offending message. Problem is solved and virus will not spread.

Origins: This " helpful " bit of advice first appeared on the Internet

in mid-August 2001. It purports to offer an easy-to-implement solution to

counter the ongoing travails visited upon those foolish enough to have

opened virus-laden e-mails by disarming the virus' ability to spread to

others disguised as legitimate mail from the duped user. According to the

advice, netizens need only add a bogus !0000, 0000, or 10000 entry in their

e-mail address books to create an effective " shark account " that will gobble

up unauthorized mailings to the full book.

This trick will work somewhat, but it's not the panacea it's presented

to be. Although the recommended action will help derail the spread of

viruses designed to do a " send all, " it will not counter the many that

randomly select individual addresses from a user's address book or

supplement addresses harvested from that location with those found cached

elsewhere on the system. (This method also assumes that if the first entry

in a list of recipients is invalid, the message won't be sent to any of the

recipients -- this is not necessarily true of all e-mail programs.) Faked

entry or not, those who correspond with users infected with those sorts of

viruses will be just as vulnerable as they ever were.

Moreover, even those viruses whose spread has been halted via the ruse

of a fake address book entry can still be doing damage to the infected

user's system. Once an executable file has been opened and run, any virus it

contains begins doing its dirty work. Part of that dirty work may amount to

mailing itself to others, but if the virus it programmed to do more than

just replicate itself via e-mail, it will still be present to wreak havoc on

the infected computer. Deleting the infection-carrying e-mail will not halt

whatever else may be underway.

Only a fool takes advice that amounts to altering anything on his own

system without first fully understanding its nature. Though the current

" helpful trick " is innocuous, there is no guarantee later versions will not

circulate that instruct the credulous to do harm to their systems under the

guise of helping them. Witness the May 2001 sulfnbk.exe hysteria where

thousands of users geared to take whatever advice turned up in their inboxes

were duped into deleting a key Windows operating system file from their home

systems.

The best advice for countering viruses has always amounted to

investing in good anti-virus software and using the product regularly to

scan for infected files. Second best is a caution against running executable

files sent in e-mail. Prurient or lustful curiousity often fuels the spread

of those infections, as users who should by now know better open

applications that promise videos of the McVeigh execution or naughty

encounters featuring the latest media hotties.

Peek not lest you lose, not your soul, but your hard drive.

Barbara " monkey C:\, monkey lose " Mikkelson

Last updated: 12 September 2001

The URL for this page is http://www.snopes.com/inboxer/virus/quickfix.htm

Click here to e-mail this page to a friend

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Very interesting. I guess I'm going to have to change my password again.

When my daughter is on my computer and a virus warning pops up, she ignores

it!!! She probably just closed the warning and did nothing about the damn

thing!

Thanks for letting me know. I'm scanning now. Really strange cause it get's

scanned when they go out, too. What was in the subject line?

Rhonda

> Re: Virus

>

>

> > Rhonda,

> >

> > I received an email message with your name on it and it was a virus. I

> know

> > that Norton take care of viruses but I did not open it as it had the

> subject

> > line one that was a virus. So I knew that even with Norton not to open

> it.

> > But the mail was from digitalangel.

> >

> > Take care,

> > Irene

> >

> > Books may well be the only true magic

> > Alice Hoffman

>

>

>

>

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Very interesting. I guess I'm going to have to change my password again.

When my daughter is on my computer and a virus warning pops up, she ignores

it!!! She probably just closed the warning and did nothing about the damn

thing!

Thanks for letting me know. I'm scanning now. Really strange cause it get's

scanned when they go out, too. What was in the subject line?

Rhonda

> Re: Virus

>

>

> > Rhonda,

> >

> > I received an email message with your name on it and it was a virus. I

> know

> > that Norton take care of viruses but I did not open it as it had the

> subject

> > line one that was a virus. So I knew that even with Norton not to open

> it.

> > But the mail was from digitalangel.

> >

> > Take care,

> > Irene

> >

> > Books may well be the only true magic

> > Alice Hoffman

>

>

>

>

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Share on other sites

Very interesting. I guess I'm going to have to change my password again.

When my daughter is on my computer and a virus warning pops up, she ignores

it!!! She probably just closed the warning and did nothing about the damn

thing!

Thanks for letting me know. I'm scanning now. Really strange cause it get's

scanned when they go out, too. What was in the subject line?

Rhonda

> Re: Virus

>

>

> > Rhonda,

> >

> > I received an email message with your name on it and it was a virus. I

> know

> > that Norton take care of viruses but I did not open it as it had the

> subject

> > line one that was a virus. So I knew that even with Norton not to open

> it.

> > But the mail was from digitalangel.

> >

> > Take care,

> > Irene

> >

> > Books may well be the only true magic

> > Alice Hoffman

>

>

>

>

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Oh hell Irene, that wasn't a virus! That was a goofy internet snowball

fight! LOL I sent it to several people and no one else told me that it

was a virus. That's strange that Norton said it was cause when I got it, it

didn't!??

Rhonda

Re: Virus

> Caught Ya! (hope this works) From what I understand you will find a blank

> message. I am going to rescan mine too just in case. I wanted to keep

the

> message with the subject line so that I could get it to you. Norton

caught

> it so I did not get the virus. I have been told (although I am not sure

that

> this is not an Urban Myth) that some viruses can get past Norton. I for

one

> don't believe it. I know that the mail is scanned when it goes out. I am

on

> Biblio which is a list of booksellers mostly. That is where I heard about

> this virus and all the others that pop up. I trust them because their

> livelihood depends on making sure that they do not get viruses and pass

them

> on to customers.

>

> Take care,

> Irene

>

> Books may well be the only true magic

> Alice Hoffman

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Come to think of it, this wasn't even supposed to go to this list! I know

this list doesn't except anything like what I sent, I must have clicked the

addy by accident cause I sent it to both the groups above and below this

addy in my address book. Sorry about that!

Rhonda

Re: Virus

>

> Caught Ya! (hope this works) From what I understand you will find a blank

> message. I am going to rescan mine too just in case. I wanted to keep

the

> message with the subject line so that I could get it to you. Norton

caught

> it so I did not get the virus. I have been told (although I am not sure

that

> this is not an Urban Myth) that some viruses can get past Norton. I for

one

> don't believe it. I know that the mail is scanned when it goes out. I am

on

> Biblio which is a list of booksellers mostly. That is where I heard about

> this virus and all the others that pop up. I trust them because their

> livelihood depends on making sure that they do not get viruses and pass

them

> on to customers.

>

> Take care,

> Irene

>

> Books may well be the only true magic

> Alice Hoffman

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Come to think of it, this wasn't even supposed to go to this list! I know

this list doesn't except anything like what I sent, I must have clicked the

addy by accident cause I sent it to both the groups above and below this

addy in my address book. Sorry about that!

Rhonda

Re: Virus

>

> Caught Ya! (hope this works) From what I understand you will find a blank

> message. I am going to rescan mine too just in case. I wanted to keep

the

> message with the subject line so that I could get it to you. Norton

caught

> it so I did not get the virus. I have been told (although I am not sure

that

> this is not an Urban Myth) that some viruses can get past Norton. I for

one

> don't believe it. I know that the mail is scanned when it goes out. I am

on

> Biblio which is a list of booksellers mostly. That is where I heard about

> this virus and all the others that pop up. I trust them because their

> livelihood depends on making sure that they do not get viruses and pass

them

> on to customers.

>

> Take care,

> Irene

>

> Books may well be the only true magic

> Alice Hoffman

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Hi Rhonda

Laughter is the best medicine :-) Will you please email the snowball fight to

me? I love those kind of things.

lyndi@...

Silly Lyndi

DigitalAngel wrote:

> Oh hell Irene, that wasn't a virus! That was a goofy internet snowball

> fight! LOL I sent it to several people and no one else told me that it

> was a virus. That's strange that Norton said it was cause when I got it, it

> didn't!??

>

> Rhonda

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Hi Rhonda

Laughter is the best medicine :-) Will you please email the snowball fight to

me? I love those kind of things.

lyndi@...

Silly Lyndi

DigitalAngel wrote:

> Oh hell Irene, that wasn't a virus! That was a goofy internet snowball

> fight! LOL I sent it to several people and no one else told me that it

> was a virus. That's strange that Norton said it was cause when I got it, it

> didn't!??

>

> Rhonda

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