>
> >>> ... threat that looks like an official e-mail from the CIA or FBI
> >>> but can leave your computer wide open to intruders.
> >
> Perhaps if you have a very guilty conscience. The one I received was
> from '
.....departmentKILLspam
.....cia.gov' and contained significant grammar errors.
> Besides, I know as an american that if the CIA gets mad at me, they'll
> come knocking down my door with a swat team, not send some reasonably
> polite email, cause I watch TV! Shucks, with the stuff I do rather
> openly, I'll probably just disappear to a 'camp' in cuba...
>
>
> > Since I use Gmail, I feel safer than people browsing their mail on a
> > dedicated mail program (Thunderbird, Outlook, etc.).
> >
> > Does anyone have a feel for the veracity of that?
>
> Gmail, or yahoo, or other web-based email systems, insert presumably
> highly-supported, well maintained, carefully monitored, and very
> up-to-date email client software in between you and any viruses or
> worms/etc that might be out there. I would think the involved
> companies have a very strong interest in NOT seeing such malware
> propagated. In addition, malware that exploits actual bugs in the
> client software (buffer overflow cracks and such) would end up
> attacking the host software and not your PC software. However,
> web browsers are equally guilty to most pc clients in that their
> ease-of-use features still allow you to easily do stupid things
> like 'click on the attachment', so "social engineering cracks"
> like this one wouldn't seem to be much safer read either way. And
> browsers have their own list of crackable bugs...
>
> BillW
>