Solved Canadian Pharmacy Bot in Yahoo Mail

bej

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I've read where the Canadian Pharmacy spam is actually a bot.
What steps can I take to stop my email from accepting this spam
or do I just continue to delete it ??
 

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First, mark it as spam. Then run SuperAntiSpyware (the free version works fine). Before deleting anything it finds, check to make sure you don't have a cookie enabled for one of the items it finds.
 

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I always use "private browsing" mode and delete all cookies when I come off the net. I wasn't sure if Yahoo could do anything about the spam being delivered by the bots.
 

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Sorry for not saying I followed your advice and downloaded SAS. Will run it shortly.
 

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Marking an item as spam should have Yahoo put Canadian Pharmacy emails into the spam folder.

Deleting cookies when exiting the internet will not prevent cookies used as a bot from being put onto your computer long enough to deliver the spam email. I have my browser set to notify if a website attempts to put a cookie on my computer, giving me the chance to either accept or block the cookie. Some cookies are beneficial (such as the one for this site) so I don't want them getting deleted or blocked but the majority of cookies do get blocked.
 

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Must be old age.....I know I wrote a response after SAS ran but, It's not listed.
I ran SAS and it found nothing...no unwanted program or file.
Thanks for your explaination.
 

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There is little you can do directly. Once you enter a spam list somehow, it's impossible to get out of it and anyone with access to that will be free to send as many emails as they please. Once you receive it, just delete as soon as possible, opening it might be dangerous too (if not directly, it may provide feedback to the spammer). Other than marking it as spam in your email client, just delete and forget about it, that's all you can do.

Antiviruses, as suggested, are of little value. For one they don't prevent spam at all (since it's sent from another system). What they are "good" for is to scan already delivered spam for some malicious payload, just in case you run it in accident. They might also be useful to clean your system if a bot was installed in your own computer, that prevents you from sending spam yourself without knowing, but don't stops others from spamming you.

Cookies have nothing to do at all with spam. They're just small pieces of text dropped on your browser by websites, frequently used to save site preferences, keep you logged into some site, or at worst to identify and track you. Some can be used maliciously, granted, but again, they're completely unrelated, and having or deleting them won't give more or less spam.

All spam is sent by bots, there is little to no human interaction there. Once your address enters some spammer database by any means, you're toast :p, plain and simple. He'll spam you as long as he wants to. The only "protection" is the anti-spam filter present in some clients and webmail servers, that'll identify and send it, hopefully, to junk. They have their drawbacks too.

Ultimately, you'll have to accept that spam is an inevitable part of internet. You can filter it, but more will come. Just be careful where and who has access to your email address and with some luck you won't enter a spam list. If the situation becomes unmanageable, the only way out of the mess it to close the email account and open another new one.
 

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...Cookies have nothing to do at all with spam. They're just small pieces of text dropped on your browser by websites, frequently used to save site preferences, keep you logged into some site, or at worst to identify and track you. Some can be used maliciously, granted, but again, they're completely unrelated, and having or deleting them won't give more or less spam...

I disagree. While are harmless in themselves, they can be used to collect data, track your activity, and allow spam to be placed on your computer. The reason I had the OP scan with SAS is SAS will detect those tracking cookies and remove them. I have stopped a lot of spam that way. Anytime I start getting multiple attacks for a particular kind of spam, such as the Canadian Pharmacy crap, I run SAS and I will usually find a tracking cookie or two. Removing them and making sure I block those particular cookies usually stops that spam.
 

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I disagree. While are harmless in themselves, they can be used to collect data, track your activity, and allow spam to be placed on your computer. The reason I had the OP scan with SAS is SAS will detect those tracking cookies and remove them. I have stopped a lot of spam that way. Anytime I start getting multiple attacks for a particular kind of spam, such as the Canadian Pharmacy crap, I run SAS and I will usually find a tracking cookie or two. Removing them and making sure I block those particular cookies usually stops that spam.

Collect data and track you, yes, certainly, but "allow spam to be placed on your computer" makes no sense at all. Email (spam or not) is sent though protocols completely different than the web and cookies, SMTP to be more precise, and it has no knowledge to what cookies are. Cookies are part of the HTTP standard and stored within your own browser, to which no spam server has access.

Antiviruses may cry about cookies because they can be used to violate your privacy, that's a good and reasonable thing to do, but has nothing to do with spam. The only prevention is to avoid your addresss to be collected by a spammer (that's typically done though shady site signups, sold by some other site or from stolen databases). Cookies do not participate in that at all.
 

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I disagree. While are harmless in themselves, they can be used to collect data, track your activity, and allow spam to be placed on your computer. The reason I had the OP scan with SAS is SAS will detect those tracking cookies and remove them. I have stopped a lot of spam that way. Anytime I start getting multiple attacks for a particular kind of spam, such as the Canadian Pharmacy crap, I run SAS and I will usually find a tracking cookie or two. Removing them and making sure I block those particular cookies usually stops that spam.

Collect data and track you, yes, certainly, but "allow spam to be placed on your computer" makes no sense at all. Email (spam or not) is sent though protocols completely different than the web and cookies, SMTP to be more precise, and it has no knowledge to what cookies are. Cookies are part of the HTTP standard and stored within your own browser, to which no spam server has access.

Antiviruses may cry about cookies because they can be used to violate your privacy, that's a good and reasonable thing to do, but has nothing to do with spam. The only prevention is to avoid your addresss to be collected by a spammer (that's typically done though shady site signups, sold by some other site or from stolen databases). Cookies do not participate in that at all.

And yet, getting rid of the asscociated cookies gets rid of the spam. I'm not saying the cookies directly put the spam onto a computer but they are part of the overall process.
 

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Corsair HX750w
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Antec Two Hundred v2 (modified)
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Cooler Master GeminII S524 120mm (fan replaced with a 140mm)
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Logitech G510s
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Logitech M525 (two in use)
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AVAST!, MBAM, SAS, Spybot S&D (all but MBAM free) Glary Util
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Their are good and bad cookies. Like real eatable cookies they come in different flavors.

I personally use SAS several times a day to check for cookies. Seldom do I find any and if I do I remove them from my systems. When I do find cookies they are tracking cookies. I know that keep cookies off my systems is not the answer to all security needs or problems. It is a good starting place.

I don't know if tracking cookies can lead to larger security problems but what I do know, if they are not on my system they can't hurt my systems.
 

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And yet, getting rid of the asscociated cookies gets rid of the spam. I'm not saying the cookies directly put the spam onto a computer but they are part of the overall process.

Once again, cookies have nothing to do with spam, they are completely unrelated. Even yet, unrelated events can still happen at the same time, not meaning that those events are cause-and-consequence. Sorry to say you, but "cookies generating spam" is a myth, plain and simple.

You can imagine a cookie like a text file you put on your desktop, written by a website on a browser when you visit it and read back by that same website on that same browser when you visit it afterwards. How can that generate spam?

A few references to back up my words:
Fact and Fiction: The Truth About Browser Cookies
http://ptgmedia.pearsoncmg.com/images/1587201364/samplechapter/1587201364content.pdf
Myths and Facts about Website Cookies - Website Cookies
Cookie Myths - Informed Choices - Because Privacy Is More Than Just A Policy
 

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Opera 12.17 x86 (main), Firefox 38 (sec), IE11 (last resort)
And yet, getting rid of the asscociated cookies gets rid of the spam. I'm not saying the cookies directly put the spam onto a computer but they are part of the overall process.

Once again, cookies have nothing to do with spam, they are completely unrelated. Even yet, unrelated events can still happen at the same time, not meaning that those events are cause-and-consequence. Sorry to say you, but "cookies generating spam" is a myth, plain and simple.

You can imagine a cookie like a text file you put on your desktop, written by a website on a browser when you visit it and read back by that same website on that same browser when you visit it afterwards. How can that generate spam?

A few references to back up my words:
Fact and Fiction: The Truth About Browser Cookies
http://ptgmedia.pearsoncmg.com/images/1587201364/samplechapter/1587201364content.pdf
Myths and Facts about Website Cookies - Website Cookies
Cookie Myths - Informed Choices - Because Privacy Is More Than Just A Policy

This quote from your first link: "Fact: Cookies are Used by Advertisers to Track Sites You Visit" (end quote). Advertisers use this data to direct targeted advertising to your computer and, if the cookie has you email address included, the email address will be used by the tracker to send spam. Also, that email address will most likely be sold to other spammers.

As I've already said, I have gotten rid of serial spam by deleting a tracking cookie several times and kept it from coming back by permanently blocking the cookie. The most recent one I blocked was for the daily Canadian Pharmacy spam I had been receiving. Even though I normally block cookies when a website tries to put one on my computer (assuming it's not one I do need), that one slud through. SAS found it and deleted it. Once I knew the URL of the website that planted the cookie, I blocked it. No more Canadian Pharmacy spam.

Most cookies are harmless and many are benficial but to say that no spam is caused by cookies is flat wrong.
 

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Custom Build
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Win 7 Ultimate 64 bit
CPU
Intel i7-3930K
Motherboard
ASUS P9X79 WS
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Graphics Card(s)
MSI R7850 Twin Frozr 2GD5/OC Radeon HD 7850 2GB 256-bit GDDR
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Asus Xonar Essence STX
Monitor(s) Displays
3x Asus VG248QE 24", Vizio 32" TV
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1080, ?
Hard Drives
Samsung 128GB 840 Pro SSD (1),
Samsung 4TB 850 EVO SSDs (4)
Samsung 4TB 850 EVO SSDs (16) external backup drives used in 2.5" hot swap bays in the computer.
PSU
Corsair HX750w
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Antec Two Hundred v2 (modified)
Cooling
Cooler Master GeminII S524 120mm (fan replaced with a 140mm)
Keyboard
Logitech G510s
Mouse
Logitech M525 (two in use)
Internet Speed
=< 32Mbps down, 8Mbps up
Antivirus
AVAST!, MBAM, SAS, Spybot S&D (all but MBAM free) Glary Util
Browser
IE11
Other Info
LSI 9211-8i HBA card (8 SATA III ports), 2.5" & 3.5" Hot Swap Bays, HooToo HT-CR001 PCI-E to USB 3.0 Internal Hub + 6 Slot Card Reader, and LG Model CH12LS28 BD-ROM Optical Drive. Also, ScanSnap S1500 ADF duplexing scanner, Canon 9000F flat bed scanner, Corsair SP2500 2.1 speakers, Samsung CLP 415nw laser color printer, Cyberpower PP2200SW UPS
Cookies are used to gather information. Exactly what cookie gathers what information, I really don't know. If one remove the cookies it will solve the problem until the next ones come along.
I have found out, at least in my opinion that if one has tracking cookies and does a little online shopping; what ever they were shopping for some how you get a bunch of email wanting to sell you the same things you were shopping for. It might be impossible but it has happened to me.

If you notice when you log off this forum it states something to the effect that all cookies have been removed. Very nice and thoughtful idea.
 

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INTEL SSD 730-240 Gb Sata 3.0/
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EVGA Platium 1200W
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Phanteks Luxe Tempered Glass 8 fans/ one radiator
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XSPC/ Water Cooled CPU
Keyboard
Das 4 Professional
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Logitech M705/MX Anywhere 2-S
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100 mbits
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Microsoft Security Essentials/ Malwarebytes Premium 3.0/ SAS
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I.E. 11 default/Firefox/ ISP Time Warner Cable/Spectrum
Other Info
LG BluRay Burner/
Sound system-KLipsch-THX/
Icy Dock ssd Hot Swap bays.
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