Unusual One-Word Emails: Have You Seen It?

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An unusual influx of emails containing single words starting with the letter "a," such as "accommodate." and "acclimate.," has raised concerns about a potential virus designed to bypass Bayesian spam filters. The discussion speculates on the nature of these emails, with some humorously attributing the phenomenon to a disgruntled employee from Merriam-Webster. Participants debate whether these emails could be a form of intentional spam or a more complex issue involving a virus that manipulates email clients. The conversation also touches on the importance of spelling and the quirks of user names in the forum. Overall, the thread highlights the community's curiosity and humor regarding this peculiar email occurrence.
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I just had an influx of emails from different addresses that just have one word in them followed by a period, and the words all begin with the letter "a." So, for example, I received the word "accommodate." from one address and "acclimate." from another. Looks like a virus that's meant to do nothing other than circumvent everyone's bayesian spam filters.

Is there a version of Murphy's Law that incorporates free will? Like, "if it can be broken, someone will always choose to break it."

Anyway, it was pretty unusual, so I was wondering if anyone else has seen it.
 
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You got my emails? Great. B is already on its way.
 
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Too late! I've already retrained the filter, so I'll never see 'em.

Although, looking at "accommodate" helped my spelling.
 
Mickey said:
Too late! I've already retrained the filter, so I'll never see 'em.

Although, looking at "accommodate" helped my spelling.
It's about time someone found a productive use for viruses.

My prime suspect is the disgruntled Mirriam Webster employee that was beaten out for the duty of writing the definitions for all the dirty words.
 
Mickey said:
I just had an influx of emails from different addresses that just have one word in them followed by a period, and the words all begin with the letter "a." So, for example, I received the word "accommodate." from one address and "acclimate." from another. Looks like a virus that's meant to do nothing other than circumvent everyone's bayesian spam filters.

Is there a version of Murphy's Law that incorporates free will? Like, "if it can be broken, someone will always choose to break it."

Anyway, it was pretty unusual, so I was wondering if anyone else has seen it.

Mattara v1.2.1 automatic correction of the use of computing/technology related words...

Initializing search...

Mails can only contain viruses if it has an attached file or if they hacked/cracked your online email service. The correct term is usually "Spam", "email spam" and so on.

:rolleyes: :smile:
 
BobG said:
My prime suspect is the disgruntled Mirriam Webster employee that was beaten out for the duty of writing the definitions for all the dirty words.

It's Merriam-Webster.
 
Rach3 said:
It's Merriam-Webster.
AHA! So it was YOU! You're the disgruntled employee who wrote the virus/worm/spam/whatever!
Clever plan to catch the culprit, Bob!:wink:
 
Rach3 said:
It's Merriam-Webster.

It is technically "Merriam-Webster Online" but who cares :P
 
Mattara, I'm not stupid.*

Someone could have written a virus that would tell an email client to send such and such messages to so an so. I seriously doubt I'm being intentionally spammed by this lot of people.

*Honest!
 
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Mickey said:
Mattara, I'm not stupid.*

Someone could have written a virus that would tell an email client to send such and such messages to so an so. I seriously doubt I'm being intentionally spammed by this lot of people.

*Honest!
I don't know. Look at the clues:

1) Rach3 knows how to spell Merriam-Webster.

2) Rach3 had to request a shorter user name because he was too lazy to type in his entire name every time he logged on.

This is clearly Rach3 spamming you with his version of "War and Peace".
 
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