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email from dead guy

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techjulie

Programmer
Feb 27, 2002
28
US
One of my users just recieved an email from a gentleman who has been dead for 2 years. It's not a Klez or other address spoofing virus because it specifically references the class he was teaching.
I've heard of emails holds and retrys with a standard 72 hour period but 2 years??
I'm on Exchange 5.5 and the email was sent from an outside ISP (not our on-campus system).
Can anyone think of a reasonable explaination for a long hold time?

Thanks in advance!

-Julie
 
Maybe the dead guy's computer is used by someone else who (re)sent (by mistake) an email through his email account, which may have been left in place...

I guess a miracle is out of the question, isn't it?


Just a thought...
[pipe]
Daniel Vlas
Systems Consultant
danvlas@yahoo.com
 
I'm thinking a miracle is probably a low likelihood but who knows? (not to start a theological discussion on this board)

I was thinking that perhaps it got stuck in the outgoing Message Transfer queue, but I'm not sure why some messages get "stuck" in queue. But I thought MTA was mostly for multi-site Exchange transfers rather than from Exchange to outside world.

So another angle on this question is.... why do some messages fail to be delivered in a timely manner? What happens to that 1/100 percent of emails that get lost in the void???

Thanks for your thoughts!
 
Open and find out from the mail header which domain it originates or where the message has been relayed. I would suspect this is a virus issue where the address was grabbed from an address book.

Peping
 
Another possiblity could be that the ISP is purging e-mail, and all queued e-mail was sent out.

I've also seen cases where someone was rebuilding an Exchange server and a ton of older e-mails were sent out after the rebuild for some reason. I guess Exchange didn't recognize they were already sent.

You would think that if someone was trying to contact you from "beyond", they'd use something cooler than e-mail! J.R. Juiliano
Information Systems Specialist
Tri-City Emergency Medical Group
 
I'm hoping that they would say something more profound than "bring your stuff to class", too !

But that sounds like a reasonable explanation...

Where does Exchange keep the queued e-mail? How can I check it?

Thanks,
-Julie
 
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