by Dave Moore, 10/18/2020
Email anti-spam filters are often pretty bad at protecting email users. They let bad email through and block good messages with such regularity that I don’t really include them as part of my overall Internet safety strategy.
The spam filters that come along with having a Gmail email account are usually pretty good, though, but they still make mistakes. Today, another bad email sneaked past the Gmail filters, this time, from allegedly sent from Mrs. Susan Goedde.
The email’s subject line, which read, “From Mrs Susan,” got my attention right off, as it lacked proper English punctuation. There should have been a period after “Mrs” but the period was missing. Astute Internet safety practitioners know that, because many dangerous spam emails originate from foreign-based criminals who do not have a good grasp of the English language, their emails are often filled with bad grammar and punctuation. That was dangerous email clue number one.
Clue number two appeared as soon as I looked at the sender’s email address, which was wabaf@email.cz. Overseas email addresses often include the country of origins “country code” at the end of the address, rather than the traditional “.com” or “.net” that many folks are used to seeing. A simple Google search reveals the country code “.cz” is the code for the Czech Republic, part of what used to be known as Czechoslovakia. Why, I wondered, was “Mrs Susan” of the Czech Republic trying to contact me?
Clue number three appeared as soon as I viewed the email, which Gmail had deemed to be safe: there was a “.pdf” file attached to the message, with the filename “from mrs susan goedde.pdf.” I never open email attachments from strangers. In fact, the best email safety rules dictate that you should never open email attachments, even if they come from your best friends; exceptions would be if the sender tells you in the text of the message exactly what the attachment is, along with the filename. Indeed, many computer viruses travel around the Internet embedded in carefully-crafted PDF files. Instead of opening a potentially dangerous file, I turned to Google to find out more about the mysterious Mrs Susan Goedde.
The first search result led to information that fraudulent emails signed by her were circling the globe, enticing people to send money to claim the prize of “U$$840,000.00 dollars” won in the “Canada-Sizzler Lottery.” These emails were originating from the Czech Republic. This news made me glad I had not opened the suspicious PDF attachment.
As it turns out, there actually are people in the world named Susan Goedde. Interestingly, one of them used to be a spokesperson for the Missouri Lottery Association, but has nothing to do with the Canada-Sizzler Lottery. A bit more research showed there is no such thing as the Canada-Sizzler Lottery.
Those simple Google searches settled the issue for me, and I deleted the email, unscathed. I would imagine, though, that the real Susan Goedde’s of the world are pretty peeved their names are being used in such a seamy scam.
Dave Moore has been fixing computers in Oklahoma since 1984. Founder of the non-profit Internet Safety Group Ltd., he also teaches Internet safety community training workshops. He can be reached at 405-919-9901 or www.internetsafetygroup.org