jducoeur: (Default)
[personal profile] jducoeur
Okay, yes -- they deserve to be dropped in a vat of boiling oil and left there until well crisped. But still, one has to be impressed by the cleverness of the stock-push spammers. Today's variation seems to be email with many very short, very wide animated GIFs embedded in it. When you open the email, the GIFs begin to play, showing random slight visual garbage that eventually resolves into the usual "INVESTORS WATCH OUT! FIRM WILL BLOW YOUR MIND!" spam message. No single GIF contains anything other than garbage: you have to render all of the GIFs, laid out properly, in their final frame, to see the text.

I have to wonder how many people are falling for these things at this point. I mean, they're actually hiring some halfway smart programmers here, as they try to stay a step ahead of the spam filters, and they're working hard -- I can see the spam tech evolving week by week...

Edit: Okay, not quite as smart as I thought -- upon closer inspection, it's still all a single GIF, that just happens to render bit by bit for no apparent reason. So the final frame is still the same as the previous round of spam tech; shouldn't take long for the anti-spam forces to catch. But I suspect they'll think of the many-little-images version soon...

Re: Images in mail

Date: 2006-10-17 01:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] metahacker.livejournal.com
And in fact this is all Outlook allows, as far as I can tell. And I basically never want to see images in email in-line...

Time to write that mail client again, I guess. (I fake this by using AdBlock to block images in my online mail apps, which carefully wrap mail-embedded images in easy-to-regexp urls.)

Profile

jducoeur: (Default)
jducoeur

July 2025

S M T W T F S
  12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27 28293031  

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags