What Is the Mailer-Daemon?
Email works like a virtual postal system. When you send a message, it first goes to a server called the mailer-daemon. That server passes the message on to other servers until the message is delivered to the recipient’s inbox. When delivery fails, a mailer-daemon error message is generated and sent back to the original sender.
What Is Mailer-Daemon Spam?
Mailer-daemons do not use the address in the From line to determine an email’s sender. Instead, a mailer-daemon uses the email header, which includes a return path containing the sender’s address. By forging your address in the email header, spammers can send messages that appear to be from you without having access to your account. If they send an email to an address that no longer exists, you receive mailer-daemon spam. Since every email needs to have a sender in the From line, and spammers don’t want to use their email addresses, they often look up random addresses in people’s contacts to use for phishing and other nefarious purposes. If you open an email containing a virus or worm, it can infect your computer and send infected messages to everyone in your address book. Receiving mailer-daemon spam doesn’t necessarily mean you have malware, but there are some precautions you need to take.
What to Do if You Receive Mailer-Daemon Spam
Here are steps you should take when you receive mailer-daemon spam:
Is Anything Being Done to Stop Mailer-Daemon Spam?
Email servers have measures in place to limit the number of useless delivery notifications they send. For example, they may try to determine whether a return address has been forged before sending a delivery failure message. If the address is obviously not the real sender’s, no error email is sent. Email servers that receive large amounts of delivery failures for an address (typically with content that is either spam or malware) may either silently delete those messages or quarantine those messages in your spam folder.