Crosswords4 mins ago
Strange E-Mail
9 Answers
Hi, had strange e-mail from someone I don't know. They say they have been sent documents from my laptop and also my name and full address which they put in the e-mail. They also put an attatchment of one of the documents which I don't recognise the name of. It says they think I could have been hacked. Does anyone know how I can find out if I have been hacked or not. Cheers
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Most likely a scam or infection attempt.
Run your own virus/malware checks on your PC, and consider changing your e-mail password. But if someone has your e-mail address it is fairly easy to spoof e-mails from it, and there's little you can do about that.
In your shoes I'd not reply nor look at the attachment. Make the account look dormant.
Run your own virus/malware checks on your PC, and consider changing your e-mail password. But if someone has your e-mail address it is fairly easy to spoof e-mails from it, and there's little you can do about that.
In your shoes I'd not reply nor look at the attachment. Make the account look dormant.
There are several viruses which search out your address book and perpetuate themselves by sending versions of themselves to all your contacts. Google Norton Power Tools - run the first one and the second if you still are uncertain your machine is clean - its free. Always keep your virus definitions and windows updates current. if you are running older versions of Windows ie Vista or XP strongly consider updating.
It seems possible that someone (individual, company, authority) who is in possession of your details was hacked (along with any number of others) and that the information is being put to potential use by sending this sort of communication to you, hoping you will fall for it. You should under no circumstances do anything but ignore the message and, best of all, delete it entirely. Unless you have done any more than read it, your equipment should be fine and the sender will have gained absolutely nothing.
I had a similar one a couple of weeks ago:
http:// www.the answerb ank.co. uk/Spam -and-Sc ams/Que stion15 42310.h tml
Their aim is to get you to click on something; in my case a link, in your case a file probably containing a virus/trojan horse or similar. They will have got your details by hacking someone who has your name in their contacts list and supply you with detail that makes it look like you know and can trust them.
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Their aim is to get you to click on something; in my case a link, in your case a file probably containing a virus/trojan horse or similar. They will have got your details by hacking someone who has your name in their contacts list and supply you with detail that makes it look like you know and can trust them.
If an email looks suspicious, check that the sender name and email address match one another.
You can also check if the email is authenticated by hovering over any links before you click on them.
If the URL of the link does not match the description of the link – it could lead you to a phishing site.
You can also check if the email is authenticated by hovering over any links before you click on them.
If the URL of the link does not match the description of the link – it could lead you to a phishing site.