Got an mail this morning from "norton.security[dot]org". Subject line is "Get.protected.with.Norton.Update.Now!"
It actually comes from "broadbandhookups.info".
I'm assuming people already know about this?
Scott
Got an mail this morning from "norton.security[dot]org". Subject line is "Get.protected.with.Norton.Update.Now!"
It actually comes from "broadbandhookups.info".
I'm assuming people already know about this?
Scott
Got an mail this morning from "norton.security[dot]org". Subject line is "Get.protected.with.Norton.Update.Now!"
It actually comes from "broadbandhookups.info".
I'm assuming people already know about this?
Scott
If you had read my post more closely, you would have read that the email in question actually came from broadbandhookups.info. Or are you trying to tell me that broadbandhookups.info is a legitimate part of Norton?
Scott
Hi,
As mentioned earlier NortonSecurity.org is operated by Searchlight Systems, Inc. Founded in 2008 and not affliated with Symantec or Norton.
For reference :
Please visit this thread : norton@nortonfromsymantec.com email legit?
http://community.norton.com/t5/Norton-360/norton-nortonfromsymantec-com-email-legit/m-p/713689
Thanks,
Murali.
You are deliberately avoiding the question, which was asking if an email that came from broadbandhookups.info was a legitimate Norton email. If not, then the question was, is it a phishing email?
And as I mentioned, the email came from broadbandhookups.info, not from any of the norton sites you mention.
I posted it here because I could not find anyplace online to forward phishing emails that use Norton as a front to get people to click on the links in the email to download a trojan to disable Norton software and allow a trojan to be installed in the background.
BTW, in an email you need to view the source in order to find out the real URLs involved. You can teach any 8-year old how to hide the real URL with fake ones. It's just basic HTML. The ones that you are stuck on aren't the real URLs for the links in the message.
Also, the link you directed me to has nothing in common with the email I received.
fyi
Unread NortonSecurity.org Warning: Thinkpoint virus. 1:38 PM 5KB
NortonSecurity.org email (AT&TAppsBeta@att.sbc.bellsouth.juno.in)
Unread Norton Anti-Virus Protection Warning- You may not be protected by Norton. Update Now.
Norton Anti-Virus Protection Warning email(Norton-AntiVirusProtection@creativeusseventeen.in)
Windows 7 Home Premium x64 SP1, 360 v5.2.2.3, IE 9
deleted both
Please update thank you rao
spearson1491 wrote:You are deliberately avoiding the question, which was asking if an email that came from broadbandhookups.info was a legitimate Norton email. If not, then the question was, is it a phishing email? ....
I'm confused as you. If you understand any of those answers please explain it to me.
It was a typical customer service ploy of just saying anything regardless of whether or not it had anything to do with the problem. As long as they replied pushing one or more of the company's product, they can show they responded to a customer complaint. Whether or not they helped the situation or the customer is entirely irrelevant. They could have responded by talking about cheese baboons if they had a company logo on them, and corporate would have patted themselves on the back for having excellent customer service.
spearson1491 wrote:It was a typical customer service ploy of just saying anything regardless of whether or not it had anything to do with the problem. As long as they replied pushing one or more of the company's product, they can show they responded to a customer complaint. Whether or not they helped the situation or the customer is entirely irrelevant. They could have responded by talking about cheese baboons if they had a company logo on them, and corporate would have patted themselves on the back for having excellent customer service.
Hi,
I must apologize for the poor response above. I suspect that there may have been a bit of a language disconnect involved. The information provided is valid. The inofrmation missing is that the email is at least spam and best deleted before reading.
I know that the customer support people are doing the best they can but they have one very difficult limitation to overcome. They can only hire humans who are very falible and subject to failure. Please for give them.
If you haven't tried using the AI program available as part of the customer support package I recommend that you do. Perhaps then you will be able to cope with the humans a bit better.
As always, stay well and surf safe
Hi spearson1491,
The domain that the email actually originated from is not really of much significance, and that is perhaps why your question was misunderstood. Spam is sent from "hit and run" domains that are used for only a short period and then abandoned. Assuming this was a phishing attempt, the phishing site would not be the domain from which the email came - "broadbandhookups.info" - but rather, the website that the email was directing you to in order to obtain "Norton Update." Neither site would be likely to be up for very long, however.
Informing you that the "nortonsecurity.org" address was not a Symantec address actually answered the question because email received from any domain with that address spoofed in the "From" field would not be legitimate. And almost certainly, the same email was being sent the next day from an entirely different domain. Symantec does track these things as explained in the following article:
dickevans wrote:
...
Hi,
I must apologize for the poor response above....
SendOfJive wrote:The domain that the email actually originated from is not really of much significance, and that is perhaps why your question was misunderstood. ...
Thanks for the replies.