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Old June 10th 08, 11:02 PM posted to microsoft.public.outlook
Peter Durkee
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Posts: 137
Default Outlook 2007 sending spam email with my mail

It's possible that your machine is infected, and sending out spam as part of
a botnet, but the bounces you're getting back are probably not an indication
of that, and I don't think that the real email you're sending to people has
any part in that process. The fact that Comcast has you using an alternate
port for SMTP does indicate that maybe your machine is spamming and they are
blocking port 25 from you, knowing that you can switch Outlook to a
different port, but the botnet software won't be able to make that change.

What I'm saying is don't worry about the email you're sending through
Outlook. Focus instead on scanning your machine with whatever tools you have
to make sure it's not spamming in the background.

-Peter

"John Monahan" wrote in message
...
That's what I thought too but I had one person tell me that he could not
receive my e-mail because some sever along the route trapped my e-mail
address as a spam site. Also Comcast won't let me use the normal SMTP
port but this 587 one to block "my spam" going out.

Is there anyway to see if "attached" other e-mail addresses are included
in a sent e-mail other than looking at it on a friends computer where it
appears clean.



"Peter Durkee" wrote in message
...

"Gordon" wrote in message
...
"John Monahan" wrote in message
...
It looks like Outlook is sending multiple spam e-mails to people I do
not know when I send out an a-mail.

I'm guessing this is the case because I am getting 10-20 a-mails a day
saying that unknown addressees I do not recognize cannot accept my
mail. Already my service provider sent a warning and forced me to
change from the "normal" SMTP port to the 587 one. Three questions....

How can I be sure I am attaching spam to my outgoing e-mails. i.e.. the
spam e-mails I receive are in fact true.
How could I see/get to the spam e-mail list
How can I cleanup the problem. I use AVG it detects nothing.





It's highly probable that someone else, who has your email address on
their computer, has a virus. If that's so, nothing you can do about it.
They'll reduce and disappear with time...


Exactly, and if it *was* your computer that was sending the spam
messages, the odds are they wouldn't contain your return address because
that would make it easy to track down the source, and you wouldn't be
getting those bounces.
-Peter





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