Re: highjacked computer
These steps will not really tell you WHO is sending the messages, but you can see from where they are being sent which is still kind of cool....
First you need to view the "Email header". The steps to view the header varies depending on the program you use to view your emails, but a google search to find your particular steps is easy. I'll use Outlook as an example.
First, navigate to the spam email you received but don't open it yet. Click one time on the message so it's highlighted in blue. Right click on the message then select "message options". At the bottom of this window is something called "Internet headers". Select/copy all of this text and paste it into Word or another document so you can see the whole thing.
Once it's pasted into word, scroll to the bottom of the document. Once at the bottom, start scrolling up while looking for a IP (internet protocol) address, which will be a series of numbers which looks like this 183.213.109.213. An IP address is a specific numeric assignment for a component that accesses the internet/network. Your computer has an IP address right now which is assigned to it by your ISP (internet service provided). Don't bother remembering it because likely you don't have a static ip, meaning your IP addresses changes about every 24 hours or so. The trick is finding the correct SOURCE IP address and not just the IP address of a router which forwarded on the email. Look for something in the header stating "Received from" as a hint. keep going up the word document and look for the first IP address you see and try searching it using a IP address lookup tool such as
www.whatismyip.com.
Once you find the spammer's IP address, in a separate window go to
http://www.whatismyip.com/tools/ip-address-lookup.asp .
this will allow you to lookup an IP address and it will display on a map where that IP is assigned to. Even though you're only going to get a city, its still kind of cool to see where your spam is coming from. India, Russia and Italy are very common sources.
I'd be lying if I said I've never spammed them back, along with a little hint that I know approximately where they are. I don't recommend doing this however!
Lastly, in an attempt to stop emails from the spammer, you can block his/her email address directly in your email program or you can block the entire domain if you're confident that you won't be missing other emails coming from the same domain. A domain is another word for describing the website that is the source of your emails. For example, lets say you use
myname@hotmail.com. Hotmail.com is your domain. If you are getting spam from a specific domain, like
spammer@goofball.com, just block all emails coming from any goofball.com domain completely.
Good luck and DEATH TO ALL SPAMMERS!!!!!!
