Spammers are increasingly using 'out of office' features in web-based email
to relay junk messages, security experts warned today.
McAfee
Avert Labs reported several instances where spammers set up web-based email
accounts and configured auto responders with spam messages.
Advertisement
The scammers then send email with fake 'from' addresses to their newly
created web mail accounts. The 'from' addresses subsequently receive the spam
'out of office' notices.
McAfee noted that, while this may sound like a convoluted way to send spam,
it allows the fraudsters to trick spam filters.
An automatic reply from a well-known web-based email service will look
legitimate to many spam filtering tools.
In addition, unlike spam sent by botnets, the auto reply spam will have a
legitimate sender and will be signed with the correct signatures used to sign
email messages, such as
DKI or
Sender
ID.
We have seen an increasing amount of spam apparently sent by legitimate web-based email systems
Jeremy Gilliat Anti-spam engineer, McAfee
The auto-responder spam does not look like a typical out of office reply. The
message subject always contains 'Re:' because it is added by the web mail
service, but the spammer controls the rest of the subject line and the message
body text.
"In recent weeks we have seen an increasing amount of spam apparently sent by
legitimate web-based email systems," said Jeremy Gilliat, an anti-spam engineer
at McAfee.
"I suspect the spammer has a program that automatically creates accounts and
sets the responder text, all with no manual work required. This gives the
spammer lots of web-mail accounts, all used to spam lots of people."
Comments
Have your say on this article