Jonathan Ryshpan wrote: > In response (possibly) to my recent posting on this list: > Firefox crashes after printing > I received the appended message (truncates), which looks like a phishing > trip, and might just fool someone whose English is not particularly > good. > > Has anyone else seen things like this? I don't think that it's in response to your posting. There's been an outbreak of spam recently containing text taken from computer-oriented posts. It's presumed that this is to help the spam get around Bayesian filters -- the spammers seem to reckon that the people who run the best spam filters will receive e-mail with similar technical content, and they hope that the Bayesian filters will latch on to it as "known good" words. I don't know if the spam is aimed at the techies themselves, or at less technical users on the same domains (especially if the domain is set up to do spam-filtering on the server, with a system-wide set of "spam" and "good" words). Those less-technical users might be some of the few people on the Internet who don't see much spam *and* are on the spammers lists, so they might not have their cynicism properly tuned. I've only noticed one such spam in my archives -- it was so malformed that SpamAssassin (correctly) considered the entire message body to be part of one very long header, and scored it up accordingly. Even when spammers think they're being clever, they're still stupid. Hope this helps, James. -- E-mail: james@ | The TV networks don't know what to do about the loss of aprilcottage.co.uk | eyeballs, and are prepared to try absolutely everything | they can to get them back, apart from making stuff worth | watching. -- Peter Corlett