well, i wouldn't trust it because they could send it to all the people in their junk mail.
the point is just incase only if you signed in answer it. if you don't know the person,
do not answer it. people send viruses
The limitations of emails are that they may carry viruses
They carry viruses that can harm your computer
Trojan horses can carry viruses. Trojan horses disguise themselves to e something they are not. Trojans can be spread via email.
i received a email saying i won the Canadian lottery is it true
Some computer viruses.
Macro viruses
MSN lottery is a scam email regarding winning a lottery, there are no winners only losers.
Very suspicious, as entry into the National Lottery is anonymous. If you have registered to play the lottery online, then the email may be legitimate. However, I would advise you to check the source IP address, in the email's header, just to be certain.
I just got an email saying I won the 2008 lottery for this exact same lottery in 2008, which more than likely means this is fraud.
Parasites can carry and transmit viruses, but they do not "cause" them.
Waves coming into a beach may carry human viruses but the risk is low. Radio waves received by a radio receiver will not carry viruses that you could catch. Wireless communication used by computers should not carry viruses if the communication (radio waves) system is properly set up.
No,There are only two legal lotteries in Britain, the National Lottery and the Monday Lottery, and they do NOT use email to notify winners.DO NOT reply to any emails you receive saying that you have won a lottery that you did not enter. They are frauds. You will lose your money. There is no "free lunch"; don't be foolish and believe a scam!YOU WILL NOT BE NOTIFIED BY EMAIL BY ANY LEGITIMATE LOTTERY THAT YOU WON A PRIZE. If you do receive such an email, it IS a fraud, do not reply to it!