Mar 23, 2010 22:04
How could this have happened to me?
It shouldn't have happened to me!
I've played the game well, a secure alphanumeric password with no logins at public hotspots. The only access outside of home would be on a secure network, and my BlackBerry. This has never happened to me before and I've not done anything out of the ordinary these few days.
Well, you guys and gals out there, just be careful. It could happen to you, too!
Let me get some brief definitions out of the way. SPAM--the ever popular term for emails which are basically junk emails. PHISHING attacks--attacks to get some information from the email account holder. And the probably less publicized SPOOFS--being email sent using your email as the "sent from" point. All these three forms of considerable tech crimes are common and probably inconsequential to reasonably knowledgeable email users.
Stumbling onto something different and worrisome, my Gmail "sent box" sent emails from my Gmail account to addressees NOT in my contacts list, and furthermore with content that I did not write! Here's a picture
That's obviously SPAM, which looks like it was sent out from my Gmail.
What's worse is that it was most definitely sent from my account and NOT SPOOF as it even had my signature on it.
This is most definitely the work of an EVIL BOT. Hopefully, there wasn't an organic hacker behind the scene of this evil plot. Goodness knows what secrets Alan Tan's inbox holds.
Yup! my signature is on it, contrary to spoof.
Do not wrong me for not having secure computers. I have not recently accessed Gmail from any unsecure computers or hotspots. The computers which had my Gmail accounts running at the time the spam was sent out had corporate versions of Norton antivirus running 24/7.
The rest of the computers in my home network, which I access my Gmail from, all had Microsoft Security essentials running on it in addition to Norton. All these "branded" antivirus applications, and still, security wasn't tight enough?
Moreover, my mobile Internet access is from my BlackBerry, through a secure server. I could understand an iPhone or Android smartphone being vulnerable to hacking, considering they do not run any security software.
Googling for answers, the usual blame went to the lack of spyware or malware security, password theft from popular sources such as social-networking sites, Facebook was a frequent victim.
A rather recent theory surfaced that Gmail itself could have been compromised, been hacked into, considering the cold Internet war being waged on Google by a subcontinent of hackers.
Is there a hole in Gmail's security? That's the big question.
Nevertheless, my resolution for this series of unfortunate events would be frequent password changes to my Gmail account at least once every three months, as per my corporate protocol.
I've always hated the way corporate security is, having to change my password for email access once every three months or so. I had to learn the hard way regarding the practicality of corporate security.
For the time being, I've changed my Gmail password and security question and, hopefully, this was a once-off attack on my account. I'll log off Gmail every time I'm not online (there goes Google Talk), will also disable Google Chat on my browser and PC and leave it only on my BlackBerry.
I'll be keeping tabs on my Gmail Sent box to see if this happens again.
Any other ideas, anyone?
There doesn't seem to be any other way to enhance security in Gmail, and anymore security would be left to Gmail itself.
To everyone out there, remember that the lack of cyber security is very real.
I never knew it could happen to me.