> Thanks for the thought, but this is one of the many "successful" internet hoaxes > going around. Please > notify whomever you received that email from (and whomever you might have > forwarded it to) that there > is no such virus, and to check the web sites listed at the end of this email if > they wish to confirm this... Nice explanation. We get these virus "warnings" constantly where I work. They are an extreme nuisance. Our normal everyday users often believe them and then forward them all over our campus. It bogs the mail system, gets people worked up about nonexistant viruses that are said to do thing that are physically impossible, and are generally just a pain in the #$%. I have a tendancy to just hit 'Delete' whenever I see a subject that says "Virus Warning", which is bad because when a valid warning comes, I might miss it. This is the third false warning I've seen this week alone. I did get a possible valid warning today from a security company in Santa Clara, CA, (RAM Information System) about an attachment to spam email called picture.exe. It is a trojan horse that extracts a couple of files that collect information on your file system and then sends the encrypted info to a advertising company in China. No damage is done, you are just put onto many junk mailing lists. This virus seems possible, and the way junk email is going now days, probable. This company (RAM) supposedly is posting two detection programs on their site (don't have the address), and other virus scanners are supposed to find it. -Shannon ---------------------------------------------- Shannon White Waco, TX MoProud of my Mopars! ask me about my '60 and '61 Chrysler Windsors swhite@xxxxxxxx ----------------------------------------------
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