I’ve seen a few hundred of these emails in the past couple days coming in from multiple different companies.
I’m looking for more info.
at least one said it was zendesk, most did not say any software.
the tickets are being sent with CC addresses that contain large email lists. often others on the CC who don’t know what’s happening will reply “stop emailing me”.
so far I’ve seen this coming in to multiple addresses and none of the sending companies are familiar either.
sounds familiar to anyone? any info on this? it’s there a name i can lookup to find more info? i want to know what services this effects so i can properly protect my stuff and my work stuff.
Why do you think anything is hacked? It’s trivially easy to send an email pretending to be someone else. There’s no validation.
Do they contain valid data or something?
There’s no validation.
SPF.
Optional, but recommended. But doesn’t guarantee anything unless both sides respect it. Also, IP spoofing is a thing.
Email is a broken protocol. There’s a great copy pasta about why it can’t or won’t be fixed, which I unfortunately can’t find. But it boils down to the fact that you can’t get everyone to agree on, or implement, the fixes necessary to prevent spam.
Use a host that requires it. Done?
this isn’t that
Could you elaborate on why you think that?
I’ve seen hundreds of those and they’re mostly phishing attempts. this new one doesn’t look anything like that.
this one has multiple addresses in the CC field, at least one of which is always a predefined list on the senders side. and it’s otherwise a legit looking support ticket response.
but i want to know what’s the origin, what’s the vectors, and what’s the target.
Check out https://port87.com
It’s an email service that I developed to solve this kind of problem. Everything you sign up for has its own address, so if you get these to your bank address, you know it’s a scam.
If you’re happy with your current email provider, you can achieve a similar result with subaddressing (aka plus addressing), if you set up a filter for each new address.
If you’re happy with your current email provider, you can achieve a similar result with subaddressing (aka plus addressing), if you set up a filter for each new address.
Subadressing isn’t quite as trustworthy, though, since it’s trivial to strip the plus tag, or other marks from the email.
That is true. I think spam lists usually have many thousands of addresses though, so unless they’re doing it with a script, they’re probably not stripping the subaddresses.
But a service that lets you use a dash instead of a plus, like Port87, is a bit safer in that regard. The dash is also accepted everywhere, whereas some places (like Microsoft) don’t accept a plus in an email address.
As if they wouldnt deduplicate and sanitize their list.
This is probably a 5min question on Chatgpt and executing it.
Interesting service. I’ve been doing this manually with Addy.io but that’s not feasible or desired by most, this could be a solution for that.
I got the idea because I was doing it manually too with Sieve scripts on ProtonMail.
Please try it out, and if you like it, help spread the word. :)
Does the hyphen get accepted everywhere? I use aliases already for every sign up but a shocking number of websites reject emails with the + sign as invalid, often the ones I’m most concerned about.
It’s worked everywhere I’ve tried it. Blocking the hyphen would be a really aggressive move, because that’s valid in usernames in most email services. I honestly don’t know why places block the plus.
Interesting. Will port87 work with third-party mail clients?
Not yet, but I’m working on that. SMTP works from a mail client, but I haven’t finished the IMAP server. I’m also working on customer domains, so you can bring your own domain. It’ll work with a single user setup (label@mydomain.com) or multi user setup (user-label@mydomain.com).
Or you can do it with duck.com for free
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This is someone abusing ticketing systems that send autoresponses. Nothing has been hacked, the best thing for you to do is make a mailbox filter rule that trashes those and move on.
I’ve done that, but it’s spreading.
The people operating the ticketing systems that are being abused will need to individually take action to deal with those incoming false support requests. They’re already aware of it, you don’t need to try and tell anyone.
Another thing to be aware of - sometimes malicious actors will do this in order to overwhelm your mailbox because they’re doing a identity theft or account takeover thing against you, so watch out for emails that say some password of yours was changed, or a purchase was made or something. This might not apply to you, you mentioned other recipients. But it’s still good to know.
I’ve only seen four or five. What do you use to filter your emails?
other than specific filters and generic spam filter I have the “if content contains ‘unsubscribe’ then mark as read and never mark important”
Watch out for email footers like “This is important account information. You cannot unsubscribe from these emails.”.
oh, yeah. it’s not perfect but it sure does remove so much crap i don’t intend to read.
i recently missed an event invite because of it… luckily i was just a late responder and have not actually missed the event itself
i definitely have to “browse” the unimportant emails regularly
Whose your email provider? Or do you self-host? If you have a provider you can report the spam to them so they can update their systems.
I’m using Google. I’ve done that too. protecting inboxes is step one for sure, but i also want to know the extent of this. it’s not enough for me to just block the emails and leave it at that.
if it keeps coming and i fail to block them all i want to have some info on the intent of this so I can properly educate others i work with to defend ourselves
Oh, we have a self-hosted exchange behind a watchguard and protected by Trend Micro. I haven’t seen very many of these emails you mentioned and it could be because of them. Though I can say we do get spam and malicious emails relentlessly from Gmail aliases.
Edit: as for intent, initial emails are usually always to confirm the address is a valid or active email. So make sure no one responds.
You’d be surprised how many of those emails I am still somehow getting… Not at all surprised.
Where seeing it as well. I’m unsure what the scam is. The ticket systems we saw don’t have any obvious connection to our industry. It is a lot of noise, but it wasn’t like a coverup spam, because it hit multiple users in the org at once. Really a strange thing.
i assume something just got popular with script kiddies, but i want to know what it is and what systems it effects so i can know if I’m protected or not.
gonna keep looking at least as long as i keep seeing this happening
Do yours have an onmicrosoft.com account CC’d? Both cases we have seen have had a different onmicrosoft.com account CC’d.
not sure if all of them did, but some did for sure. off looking address too
Thanks, that helps. I shared this with the mspgeek.org community to see if anyone else is seeing it.
Reply-all with “unsubscribe”
Edit: Jesus, y’all are dense.
Don’t confirm your email, it only increases its value to the black hats.
Oh shucks my super serious suggestion wasn’t the best idea?
My comment was to others who didn’t see that you used that sarcastic font when you hit post.
I didn’t downvote. 🤷
Different Font doesnt come through on my app. I just assumed they were a bonafide idiot. I downvoted
that’s not going to stop the hacked system from spamming myself and every other customer they have. I would highly doubt if they even take the time to look at any replies let alone actually read them and unsubscribe anyone who asked for it… after the entire hack was over because I called one company and they were already aware of the hack and were trying to stop it.
Ah, reply STOP
It baffles me how many people thought I was actually serious.
first day on the internet?
Usually Lemmy’s get a less dense bunch.
never forget about the sarcasm razor… whichever one it is
I’m getting big “haha i was just pretending” vibes from that guy who wrote you a paragraph lol
I guess this explains why e-mail storms are so prevalent.