TILL
Yes, but when I send messages from "Abdul," everyone can tell by the "from"
address that they were sent by me. Believe me, I am not expert enough in
computer technology to use fake addresses. Anyway, I wish that Tony
Woodcock was a fictitious character. It is sad to think that there is an
actual person out there somewhere who has no more common sense than he has.
Allah 2/28/39
Only those believing in Allah will see the gates of Heaven.
You see, faking mail is rather easy. However, the E-mail address above is
not valid, and you cannot respond to it. (In the past, I'd just use
heaven.org, but apparently that exists now, so I added islam to the address)
So, if you tried to respond to this letter, it would bounce, because
Allah@islam.heaven.org simply does not exist. We do not see this with
Tony's address. Tony is also at a university (the .edu at the end of his
email address) and accounts are a bit more difficult to fake at these
institutions. Then, coupled with the finger file, along with responses that
occur while others are writing letters, we can see that it is not Till. If
you think that someone is faking a mail message, looking at the headers will
usually reveal who sent the message. You need to see the entire header, not
just what your mail program formats to make it look nice. It is even
possible to fake these, but I think that if you look at the header from this
message, you will see that it originates from procyon.com, thus giving me
away.
-- R Jason Valentine ..ooOO miracle@procyon.com
Go Abdul!
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