Mystery email from eBay?

We received an email originating from:

DL-eBay-IT-IMD-BIA at ebaydotcom, no subject but with an attachment called"Advertiser Dashboard.pdf". There was no body in the mail.

The PDF seems as if it is associated with "Ad Commerce" and is labelled "eBay Inc. Confidential"

I would normally just call this spam but it looks as if it did come from an eBay server and, more importantly, I recognize the IDs of many of you posters on this board.

Instead of having sent the mail BCC, the sender included all the addresses in the "To" line and, again many of you guys are on the "To" list.

Anyone else got this mail and any idea what it is?

Bernie
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Mystery email from eBay?

Also, until present, it is not possible to have a virus contained within a PDF file. Well, actually there is but it would only affect someone opening the file with Adobe Writer, which only very few users have.


New information on that;

http://www.ctv.ca/generic/generated/static/business/article1429280.html

An attack on Google and at least 20 other companies, that originated from China, seems to have exploited a vulnerability in the popular Adobe Acrobat and Adobe Reader software, possibly to steal proprietary codes.

Google said on Tuesday that it would review the feasibility of its business operations in China, after a cyber attack originating from China resulted in the loss of intellectual property.

Also on Wednesday, Adobe Systems said its computer network systems had been attacked but no sensitive information was stolen.

The attackers may have been trying to exploit security vulnerabilities in Adobe Acrobat and Adobe Reader, which is widely used to create and read documents.

Cyber security firm iDefense released a note on Wednesday about Adobe Acrobat and Adobe Reader's vulnerabilities.

The vulnerability in Adobe's two products could allow an attacker to inject a code into the computer once a PDF file was opened, iDefense said in a “co-ordinated public” disclosure statement. It did not specifically refer to the Google attacks.


Adobe, which released a critical patch for this problem on Tuesday, was not immediately available for comment.

Antivirus software maker McAfee said in its “2010 Threat Predictions” report last month that Adobe software would become increasing targeted by cyber criminals, as its products are the most widely used applications globally.

“Based on the current trends, we expect that in 2010 Adobe product exploitation is likely to surpass that of Microsoft Office applications in the number of desktop PCs being attacked,” McAfee said in a statement.

Technology-focused website Wired.com quoted iDefense as saying the attack on Google and other corporations intended to steal the companies' source codes.

Journalists, dissidents and other activists in China have often been the target of “phishing attacks,” in which an e-mail that appears to be from a known sender contains an attachment with a virus or other malicious software.

In September, a co-ordinated cyber attack on the Chinese assistants of foreign news agencies contained malware that also exploited an Adobe Acrobat vulnerability.

Google said part of the attack's purpose was to access Gmail accounts of human rights activists, adding that many activists seem to have been separately targeted with attacks designed to gain access to their accounts.

Separately, Microsoft said its e-mail service was not hacked.

“We have no indication that any of our mail properties have been compromised,” a Microsoft spokesman told Reuters.



So I guess this is ANOTHER thing we have to watch out for now.:-(
Imagination will often carry us to worlds that never were. But without it we go nowhere. Carl Sagan
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Mystery email from eBay?

Interesting!

However, I still do not believe that the above had anything to do with the mail we received. It would have been too much a coincidence that the spammer would have gotten the email addresses of Canadian powersellers.

There were only a few dozen in the "CC" section and my guess is that those were Canadian sellers that also subscribed to Adcommerce.

The computer seller I wrote never replied.

Bernie
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Mystery email from eBay?

I think you're right on that, Bernie - likely it's just something sent by mistake.

But when I ran across that article, I thought it might be a good idea to let people know that .pdf's are no longer automatically safe.

I've got one Google bot that's constantly returning a hit encouraging users to download .pdf's at a certain site - I shudder to think what will happen if somebody infiltrates the site.
Imagination will often carry us to worlds that never were. But without it we go nowhere. Carl Sagan
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