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| I have been receiving a bunch of spams every day (about 50-70), no attachments, advertising of Viagra, mortage applications, penis enlargement, software solutions, etc. |
Me too. Not that I don't need these things, but enough is enough. A few days ago my computer was infected with a virus which opened the door to a multitude (135 hits with Ad-aware at one point) of adware virus's which kept popping ****/gambling sites on my screen. It took me two days to get rid of all of it using Norton, McCafee, SpyBot, and Ad-Aware simultaniously.
Yesterday I received an urgent phone call from Bell Telephone, advising me that there had been some suspicious activity on my fax/modem line for the past couple of days and that they have temporarily blocked it. Turns out my computer has been phoning some place in Africa several times for 20 minutes each time. Bell tells me I'm responsible for the $360 resulting phone bill.
Although while ridding myself of the virus's, I had shut off my high speed external modem, I forgot to deal with my computer's dial-up internal modem and AOL had been used through it to re-route these hacker calls to Africa. I recently purchased this computer and unlike every other computer I've ever owned, the internal dial-up modem does not make the familiar pinging sounds when it is activated...it is completely silent. That's why I wasn't even aware these calls were going through.
And yes, it's my fault. I had opened one of the **** e-mails, was tempted to look at their "free" video, and wham bam it was virus city. I've learned my lesson. In future, if I need ****, I'll watch it on prime time TV.