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aoncechillpanda
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Re: How can I block ALL text messages sent from EMAIL ADDRESSES?
JustGary wrote: Email to SMS Text (TMOMail) can be blocked by adding the Free feature BEMLS. Thank you. Gary If you refer to the screenshot above,for"Block Messages" you'll notice it is set to"On:Block TMOmail.net email" yet the message somehow was able to bypass this rule. This seems to be more serious than a simple "adding the Freefeature BEMLS" that's, as noted, apparently not havingany sort of effect on preventing this message from being received, while appearing like an email and, could be potentially a more serious security flaw, as noted below with details in reference to the post just before yours. It seems that it's possible it's not coming from an email and may havedisguised it's source number from not only my phone, but from being properly logged on my T-mobile accountor otherwise will be referred to as the communications routing, as itseemingly goes undetected asa phone number and leaving no phone number logged for the message'sorigin, at least when viewing message logs on the T-mobile website (which normally lists the phone number for messages being received). In a way, it seems to be able to bypassthe email disabled settings by being a phone number but is able to hide it's number from even T-Mobile so that it can't be blocked, at least that's my speculation based on the evidence shown above. Indications of security flaws that pose questions such as, why do different numbers get reported for the same message? How is it masking it's phone number to appear as an email on my phone but on my computer it seems to read coming from a 12-digit number, or could it be that the variance in text format (Unicode, UTF, ASCII,ANSI, etc.) just makes it seem that way somehow? How are emails still arriving as MMS? Is it still possible somehow for emails to be sent to a phone number aside from the aforementioned [PHONENUMBER]@tmomail.net (such as using an online service or something similar)? Whatever the case may be, since this post, it appears to have been stopped, at least this particular message (other SPAM continues). If there was action taken, it has been done unbeknownstto me and whether or not it was done covertly to prevent making known any sort of potential vulnerabilities, thank you to whoever played a role in stopping these messages.2Visto0likes0ComentariosRe: How can I block ALL text messages sent from EMAIL ADDRESSES?
It seems that even after a year, this issue is on-going and malicious actors have become more advanced. What's interesting is that when I use Windows Phone Link, the same messages appear from a different sender but when checking T-mobile usage, there's absolutely no phone number at all for the given messages being received as MMS. What's worse and somewhat counterintuitive is that to report SPAM we have to forward the message by opening them. And by opening them, anyone familiar with the Stagefright exploitwould have reason to find this risky. But if it might help find a solution, here is the message I keep getting over and over, which reminds me, to block them I have to open the message too! And by forwarding the message to SPAM (7726) triggers downloading content doesn't it? I mean, I recently disabled auto-download but I don't need it to stop auto-download of all MMS messages, just from ones not in my contact list. That seems to be a possible setting for images in emails, but I guess not MMS. But, I digress. The MMS repeated message: The obvious phishing MMS message from an email How it appears in my text message list Interestingly how it shows up on Windows Phone Link As you can see, it actually displayed a number instead of the email, but it's a 12 digit number The MMS subject line and Sender appear differently Then while logged into T-mobile and viewing usage information it just shows blank for the phone number And just to confirm like everyone else, TMOmail.net emails are blocked Block Messages On for Block TMOmail.net emails While I did see messages coming from 6245 (MAIL), they're actually ones I signed up for: Any "picture" messages originating from 6245 were valid So I just don't understand how T-Mobile doesn't have a number for these picture messages being received, how they're even being received in the first place without an origin number, whether or not by opening these messages to forward them and report them actually somehow confirmsto spammers the number works (as I have disabled sending read receipts and my device shows a brief notification upon opening one of these messages that it's "converting the messageinto a multimedia message") whether or not it's a device issue, and why T-Mobile's anti-spam features can't seem to detect them no matter how many I report. Every time I open the message, this displays at the bottom I get one of these nearly every day if not two and it's just concerning if something similar to the .gif exploit might still exist where my information could be stolen, especially with today's security of 2 factor authentication, device proximity verification, financial banking/investing apps, and mobile pay apps all on our mobile devices, what can be done? I'm not familiar with how mobile data transmission works but can't there be a way to block autoloading particularly only from non-contacts or something? With it being disabled for everyone, that means if I don't open a message in time, the message might no longer be available. I've even tried logging into the email account where it's MYNUMBER@tmomail.netbut I can't seem to get the password right for some reason even though I can log onto my T-mobile account just fine. And, if I try to go tohttps://my.t-mobile.com/account/profile/tmobile_idthe page is just blank and doesn't load. I disabled all ad blockers, changed site permissions, and still nothing. So disheartening to find this thread over a year old and still no workable solution with only mild hope of resolution if calling T-Mobile support. Hopefully somehow the information above might help a more tech savvy programmer of sorts figure out how to stop this. For reference I have a Samsung Galaxy S211Ver1like0Comentarios