you say it the same way only we say it with a little acsent like when i say it in spanish it sounds weird to me but i know what it means
iv'e checked. it is just spoofing. i don't think there is a word for your 'spoofing'!! XD
Yes, email spoofing is illegal and punishable by law under the CAN-SPAM Act in the United States. Email spoofing involves sending emails with a forged sender address to deceive recipients, which can lead to penalties including fines and imprisonment.
Email "spoofing" is a term used to describe a fraudulent email activity in which the sender's address and other parts of the message header are altered so that the message appears to come from a different sender. Spoofing is commonly used for sending spam (unsolicited email) and phishing email (attempts to obtain sensitive information for fraudulent access to secure accounts).
Yes, spoofing can be illegal and is considered a form of fraud in many jurisdictions. Engaging in spoofing activities such as caller ID spoofing or email spoofing with the intent to deceive or defraud can result in criminal charges and potential jail time. It is important to always use spoofing technology responsibly and legally.
You would be talking about email spoofing. Basically it cannot be stopped, email spoofing is when somebody sends messages that looks like its from you through email. The best course of action would be to notify everybody in a change of email.
If you are completely bilingual you might be able to do it, but you must also have good reading and writing skills in both languages. You might also be able to do it if you know English quite well and you are an educated native speaker of Spanish. Otherwise you should contact a translating company like advocatelatino.com and they can provide you with an excellent document that all Spanish speakers will understand.
I can translate the document from English to Spanish.
email spoofing
They either have your password and are using your email address to send those emails or they are spoofing the email's sender which basically is changing who the reviver thinks sent it.
buy a spanish dictionary or use 'google translate'
Just translate it the same way you translate anything. The words 'a movie' are 'una pelicula' in Spanish
Unfortunately, yes. It is possible for an email to be sent from an address without actual access to the mailbox associated with it. This is known as "email address spoofing". There is a verification system known as Sender Policy Framework, or SPF, to avoid this spoofing practice. It must be implemented on the mail servers directly, so unless one is actually running a mail server there isn't much one can do to enable it. Most mail servers do support SPF already, however, greatly reducing the risk of spoofing.