Goal of The Weather Report e-Mail Hack?

  • Thread starter Thread starter mbrmbrg
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Report Weather
Click For Summary

Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the implications and motivations behind receiving unusual weather-report-style emails after a Gmail account hack. Participants explore the potential end-game of the hacker and the security measures that should be taken in response.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Debate/contested
  • Technical explanation

Main Points Raised

  • One participant describes their experience of receiving random weather-report-style emails after their Gmail account was hacked and forwarded to a new account.
  • Another participant suggests that these emails might be designed to bypass spam filters by using common small talk about the weather.
  • It is proposed that embedded pixels in emails could allow the sender to track whether the email was opened, potentially indicating if an account is active or abandoned.
  • Concerns are raised about the hacker's awareness of the participant's new account and the risk of further hacking attempts.
  • One participant emphasizes the importance of securing the new account with two-step verification to prevent further breaches.
  • Another participant speculates that the hacker could use the information gathered from these emails to engage in phishing attacks or post automated comments on various platforms.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a mix of concerns and hypotheses regarding the motivations behind the emails, with no consensus on the exact end-game of the hacker. There is agreement on the need for enhanced security measures, but differing views on the implications of the emails themselves.

Contextual Notes

Participants mention the potential for spam detection evasion and the use of tracking pixels, but do not resolve the specific motivations of the hacker or the effectiveness of the proposed security measures.

mbrmbrg
Messages
485
Reaction score
2
Hey, a month or two ago, my old Gmail account was hacked. The whole situation was/is pretty identically to what this thread describes very well:
https://support.google.com/accounts/thread/42850129?hl=en

I've written off the old account and am no longer attempting to recover it. But the emails still forward to my new account, and I'm going crazy with curiosity. Every day or so, I get an email that a new source was granted access to my hacked account, followed by a random weather-report-style email.
1606727945536.png

1606727996823.png


Here's another example:
1606728147060.png

Other email texts include:

Dear Marie Ross !
How do you do? Marie Ross. In Wednesday will have sunny partly
and

Dear Russell Allen !
Good morning Russell Allen. In Friday will have rainySent from my iPhone

You get the picture.

Forget recovering the account: does anyone have any idea what the end-game is?
 
Computer science news on Phys.org
mbrmbrg said:
does anyone have any idea what the end-game is?
I don't, but just wanted to say that please secure your new account with two-step verification — in Gmail, when email forwarding is active, a notice is shown on the top of the inbox. Apparently the hacker knows that you have another account, and will try to hack that one too.
 
mbrmbrg said:
Hey, a month or two ago, my old Gmail account was hacked. The whole situation was/is pretty identically to what this thread describes very well:
https://support.google.com/accounts/thread/42850129?hl=en

I've written off the old account and am no longer attempting to recover it. But the emails still forward to my new account, and I'm going crazy with curiosity. Every day or so, I get an email that a new source was granted access to my hacked account, followed by a random weather-report-style email.
View attachment 273421
View attachment 273422

Here's another example:
View attachment 273423
Other email texts include:and
You get the picture.

Forget recovering the account: does anyone have any idea what the end-game is?
Maybe the weather report looking emails are designed to fool spam detectors. Small talk about the weather is probably really common, so such an email would be hard to detect as something sent by a bot.

Emails can have 'pixels' embedded in them so that the sender can detect if the email was checked. If they can get these emails through spam filters, they can use them to try to guess if an email account is being used or has been abandoned.
 
Wrichik Basu said:
I don't, but just wanted to say that please secure your new account with two-step verification — in Gmail, when email forwarding is active, a notice is shown on the top of the inbox. Apparently the hacker knows that you have another account, and will try to hack that one too.
Thanks! My guess is that my current email address gets these emails due to forwarding that I set up ages ago, but you're right: two-step verification is definitely prudent.
 
Jarvis323 said:
Maybe the weather report looking emails are designed to fool spam detectors. Small talk about the weather is probably really common, so such an email would be hard to detect as something sent by a bot.

Emails can have 'pixels' embedded in them so that the sender can detect if the email was checked. If they can get these emails through spam filters, they can use them to try to guess if an email account is being used or has been abandoned.
...They can then post auto generated comments on news sites, you-tube, and social media, as well as use it to send phishing emails to unsuspecting victims (bypassing spam detection), including your contacts.

Mmmmm... Interesting. Thanks!
 
mbrmbrg said:
My guess is that my current email address gets these emails due to forwarding that I set up ages ago
I am not questioning that, but the point is, the hacker definitely knows now that you have another account. He will surely try to hack this one too. Beware!
 
  • Like
Likes   Reactions: mbrmbrg

Similar threads

  • · Replies 4 ·
Replies
4
Views
2K
  • · Replies 9 ·
Replies
9
Views
4K
  • · Replies 49 ·
2
Replies
49
Views
7K