

…The recent raids carried out by NCA didn’t just target hackers behind well-known attacks or specific cyber crime. Named Onur Kopçak, the hacker was arrested in 2013 for operating a phishing website that impersonated bank site, tricking victims into providing their bank details including credit card information.ĥ6 Hackers Arrested in Cyber Crime ‘Strike Week’ Raids in UKĪ 20-year-old man from Hackney, London was arrested on suspicion of committing a £15,000 phishing attack. Since so many around here enjoy hating but not researching, enjoy these specific examples of PROSECUTION that you won’t click on:Ģ6-Year-Old Hacker Sentenced to Record 334 Years in Prison Such Bot Wranglers are regularly FOUND and PROSECUTED. The instruction source can be monitored and the next phase of tracking is to find the Bot Wrangler, as I call them. IF the attacks are being performed by botted devices (which now includes millions of IoT devices with crap or no security) then those specific machines can be identified, taken for analysis and the source of the bot instructions tracked. IF a company, such as FedEx decides not to do anything about the attacks, that’s up to them. That’s specifically why I do put in the time and effort to report everything. The entire concept is to identify the source(s) of the phishing spam and shut them down. I have no idea what you’re talking about. One of them is Google and another is Twitter. – – There are a few services that have NO phishing report addresses or methods. But I look up forwarding email addresses of the actual services. There are a variety of places to report phishing, including the Federal Trade Commission in the USA. FedEx has been an extremely popular target of phishing fraud. I’m convinced that I’ve become so notorious in spam rat circles that I’m on a ‘Never Spam’ blacklist.Ĭ) I report all phishing spam rat attacks to the services the spam attempts to fake. Over the years, I’ve received a remarkably low amount of spam. They get part of their blacklist from SpamCop. You can thank me, and other spam narcs, for the success of anti-spam apps like SpamSieve. I’ve been doing so since 1998 when the service began. (Although it has recently picked up the habit of dumping political solicitations into Junk as well, which is just fine with me).ī) I post ALL the spam I get over at. What’s worked very well for me for years:Ī) I mark all the spam I get in Mail such that it is now nearly perfectly trained to dump all spam into the ‘Junk’ box and not much else.
#SPAMSIEVE COUPON TRIAL#
MacDailyNews Take: We’re going to try the free trial (full version is $30) and see if it can help us clear our stupendous email quagmire. And there’s a way to set it all up so you don’t get spam on your iPhone or iPad.”

“For most of the 21st century I’ve relied on SpamSieve, and add on Mail utility that works much like Junk Mail, only better.
#SPAMSIEVE COUPON MAC#
“Second on the list is a solution employed by most Mac users in one way or another,” Mincey writes. Unfortunately, it’s throwing the baby out with bath water and not an acceptable solution despite the sentiment.”

“First on the list is a solution many of us have dreamed about using, but just don’t have the nerve. There are only two legitimate ways to defeat email spam,” Mincey writes. “Take my 22 years of dealing with email as a cue. Spam– it kills time, productivity, and efficiency.” Along with legitimate email messages comes email from the dark side. How so? In every sense of the term ‘killer app‘ email fits the definition. What’s the killer app of the internet? Some would say the browser, the window to the information superhighway,” Jeffrey Mincey writes for Mac360.
