Could be malware?
Sending spam to everyone (including mailing list) in an address book?
Several Reg readers have complained to us about receiving spam emails directed at addresses they had exclusively supplied to Pixmania, the online consumer electronics retailer. The incidents of spam – reported by four Reg readers, and numerous other users on various online forums (as a quick Google search reveals) – have …
Same thing here - I yanked my Pixmania address years ago thanks to the otherwise unstoppable torrent of spam they sent me. In spite of how much time has passed, I see from my mail logs that it was still amongst those that the spammers targeted yesterday.
I've had a number of vendor-specific emails that have been spammed over the years. I've pretty much given up contacting the company responsible since it nearly always meets with denial or defensiveness; one of them got really pretty stroppy with me in spite of it being my details that were compromised, but they went out of business shortly afterwards. With customer service like that, it was of course entirely unexpected.
Yup, I had an odd email yesterday afternoon sent to a specific work email account. Had my name in the subject and it was offering "Customer Service Assistant vacancy at ASTRO Consulting". A quick Google after reading The Reg's article and it seems to be the same email everyone is getting.
I used that email address to order from Pixmania back in August last year.
Yes, I received the same email. To an email address I have only ever used with pixmania, from whom I last bought something 6 years ago!! I don't normally get emails from pixmania, having opted out of all their mailings when I first signed up. Like you, the email has my full name(!!) - what other info do they have?!
At the bottom of the email it states, "ASTRO Consulting has obtained your contact details from public internet sources." - errrm, I don't think so!
is how the pixmania derived scam came to me today, including my 13 yr old daughters name twice,
both emails I got from different made-up names came from a known spam mailer from BLU155-W26/65.55.116.9 and 65.55.90.7 which is somewhere in US-Hotmail-land.
I can trace my contact with pixmania very definitely to a transaction with fotovista bopix via pixmania as an amazon marketplace seller in July 2007. I may email amazon_uk@pixmania.com and ask what they are up to!?
I got a load of these in the past month or two all sent to a unique email address given to The Book Depository. TBD says that an old computer from their dispatches depts got brought back on line recently and then hacked.
I'm also getting spams (including a "Lloyds Bank" phishing scam on 1st June) sent to an address given exclusively to Spa Cycles (mail order cycle components) from an order I placed several years back.
Stuff leaks. /Shrugs/
Just goggle "Pixmania crooks"
i now get 40+ spam emails a day just to my special Pixmania only email address
The don't let you cancel your order, and you have to let it ship, then refuse it at your door
then they never stop resending it to you :(
i've spent £££££'s on the phone to try and stop them
Pixmania = DSG
Having several domains to my name, I use catch-all boxes quite a lot. This means whenever I sign up for an account on any company website, I can put a suffix of their company name after my own, I could name several well known companies who have either sold on, or otherwise permitted (which includes insecurely storing) my email address to be used for spam.
I'm suddenly getting spam to unique IP addresses I provided to an airline, a high street store, an online game and a financial institution. They are address I have given no one else and have never sent an email with.
They are all SPAM to say I have a parcel that couldn't be delivered, but the email has a nasty payload.
I've been getting spams to pixmania@mydomain which include my real name ever since I opted out from all their genuine mailing lists sometime last year. I emailed customer support at the time giving them the option of admitting they had sold my details or had them stolen. They gave me a canned reply about internet security, and I haven't bought anything from them since.
they amusingly suggested
"we invite you to contact the sender to unsubscribe from the mailing list"
does that sounds like best cybersecurity practise to suggest that I email a major spam/trojan/crim bunch and ask to be removed from their dist list?
I've written back to Px mentioning ICO & CNIL & similar worrying acronyms - if Pixfalia have any idea who they are.. Pimania seem to have their warehouses in France so should be happy to read about CNIL ...Commission Nationale de l' Informatique et des Libertés
"Article 45 of the French 2004 law (Protection of Data Subjects as Regards the Processing of Personal Data) sets out the sanctions for breaches of the law. These include fines, imprisonment, publishing the information of the case in newspapers or other publications (for which the sanctioned person must pay), ceasing processing operations and removing the controller's authorisation to process"