Recommended Posts

Same here Liquid. I love Gmail, and I want something better, but I have no other choice besides Gmail since it's the best thing I available for me right now.

I even did a little tested. I signed myself up for a second Gmail account a long time ago.

I never used it, not once. I never logged into it or anything. I then logged into it to see what? SPAM.

I don't understand how.

I'm not sure if this holds true anymore, but when I had an email address with all letters, say "breakaway", I got a ton of spam. Since I changed it to "br3akaway", though, I have gotten no spam at all. I gave out both email addresses to the same exact people. Weird, huh.

every email service will be targeted. The common ones, yahoo hotmail gmail are prone to brute force due to the large numbers of users.

the prob with gmail is that it allows close matches to a username through.

But where would you rather the spam.

Blocked completly - even email it considers spam but isn't, or in the spam folder which can be reviewed.

I'm not giving my email address out. As you can see, the emails are all from the same vendor (though by surprisingly unique names). I imagine it is from a source that is bruting about in a really evil way. None of the emails are even addressed to me. As you pointed out, however, Gmail tosses spam right where it belongs - so my beef is not with Google.

My beef is with :spam:

Five here...and like you, for the first time ever.  :blink:

585049101[/snapback]

it appears to be that they are randomly generating [email protected] and then when the email doesn't bounce you're written in their database :angry:

five... all the same dodgy kinds of topics :p

Gmail does NOT have a system to deliver emails to the nearest matching email address.

The spammers put an address in the "To" field (because you have to), and then put as many email address combinations as they can manage into the "Bcc" field. This way they save on their outgoing bandwidth as they only have to send out 1 email for every 20-50 odd people.

It's shotgun targetting... if you email every variation possible, you're bound to hit a few people.

:yes: Here we go, well all bar one ended up in spam folder.

Mr Andrew Stewart is a popular one I have recieved dealing in the speil about his poor African ass being broke but if I donate some monies I will get it back big time when he gets his family wealth back.

Ohh yes, adobe, macromedia, xp, microsoft, all the big players in the most of most premium software at rock bottom prices also.

Rolex watches also dirt cheap, well they mostly came from earthlink suffix's.

That's 35 from 1 account and 1 from another.

I don't bother bouncing them just delete them.

There is a definate pattern forming. I recently started receiving spam. I have never, ever give my email address out to anything suspicious.

Im getting the "Rolex Watches", "Fountains of youth" and "Fly with Samsung" spam.

The unsubscribe links do NOTHING, this is a f**king **** take.

Spammers should be locked up for a minimum of 5 years for all the havoc and annoyance they cause.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Microsoft adds reusable skills and finance data connectors to Copilot in Excel by Karthik Mudaliar Microsoft is giving Copilot in Excel a collection of new features aimed squarely at finance teams. The update introduces reusable instructions for common tasks, connections to services such as FactSet and Morningstar, and a better way to review what Copilot intends to do before it starts changing a workbook. The most interesting addition is 'Skills' finally coming to Copilot in Excel. Skills let companies teach Copilot how to handle a recurring process, so employees do not need to write the same detailed prompt every month. Users can create skills that can specify the steps Copilot should follow, along with the required layout, formulas, and formatting. Microsoft says users can create their own skills by saving a SKILL.md file in OneDrive. The file is written using Markdown and tells Copilot when and how to perform the task. Once it is available, a user can select the skill in the Copilot pane or mention it in a prompt using the @ symbol. There is also a library of prebuilt finance skills for customers who do not want to create their own. Microsoft plans to let developers distribute additional skills through the Microsoft Marketplace and the Microsoft 365 Admin Center, with LSEG, Ramp, Rogo, samaya.ai, Velixo, and Vena among the first partners involved. The company says that it is also expanding the external data that Copilot can access from inside Excel. New connectors are being added for CB Insights, Daloopa, FactSet, Morningstar, PitchBook, and S&P Global data through technology developed by Kensho. There is a catch, however. Accessing these services may require a separate subscription from the relevant data provider, so a Microsoft 365 Copilot licence will not necessarily unlock all of them. FactSet is also only available in preview for now, with general availability planned for July. Microsoft is also trying to make Copilot’s workbook edits easier to inspect. Users can switch to a planning mode that shows which sheets, cell ranges, formulas, and assumptions Copilot intends to work with before it begins making changes. Once the work is complete, the Show Changes pane can distinguish edits made by Copilot from those made by human collaborators. The update continues Microsoft’s push to turn Excel Copilot from a chatbot into an agent that can carry out longer tasks. The company previously added an Agent Mode capable of planning and completing multi-step Excel work. Microsoft also recently acquired financial AI startup Fintool, another indication that finance is becoming a key target for its Excel AI strategy. Prebuilt skills, personalization, workbook rules, external connectors, planning mode, and Copilot attribution in Show Changes are generally available to Microsoft 365 Copilot customers using Excel on the web, Windows, and macOS. Custom skills are initially available to Microsoft 365 Insiders on Windows and Mac starting today. Microsoft plans to make them generally available across Windows, Mac, and the web over the next month. Partner-built skills are expected during the third quarter of the year. Availability may still differ depending on region and licensing.
    • Exactly. They serve different (although related) purposes.
    • Do not enter the code under any circumstances, or you will be sorry. It's definitely and most likely a hacking attempt.  That happened to me a couple of years ago, and I kept receiving those prompts for months. It's simply the attacker trying to get you tired of the constant requests, so you just give up and enter the code, so they can log in to your account. 
  • Recent Achievements

    • First Post
      kinowa earned a badge
      First Post
    • Rookie
      krychek57 went up a rank
      Rookie
    • Grand Master
      Jaybonaut went up a rank
      Grand Master
    • One Year In
      Philsl earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Dedicated
      Scoobystu earned a badge
      Dedicated
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      438
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      169
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      134
    4. 4
      Xenon
      77
    5. 5
      Michael Scrip
      75
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!