Feb
23
Yet More Travel Industry Spam to Mum
My mother’s email address is travelling extensively. I presume this is due to an email list supposed to be targeted to individuals who like to travel. Today’s installment includes the following, from a company that calls itself “Hello Travel” (hellotravel.com), which neither she nor I had ever heard of before. The ESP was Sendgrid.
Source IP: 74.63.234.14
Headers:
Received: from o1.mailer.hellotravel.com (o1.mailer.hellotravel.com [74.63.234.14])
by (Postfix) with SMTP id <redacted>
for <redacted>; Wed, 22 Feb 2012 <redacted> -0600 (CST)
DKIM-Signature: <redacted>
DomainKey-Signature: <redacted>
Received: by 10.41.<redacted> with SMTP id <redacted>
Wed, 22 Feb 2012 <redacted> +0000 (UTC)
Received: from www.hellotravel.com (unknown [10.41.<redacted>])
by i04-03 (SG) with ESMTP id <redacted>
for <redacted>; Wed, 22 Feb 2012 <redacted> +0000 (UTC)
Message-ID: <<redacted>@www.hellotravel.com>
Date: Wed, 22 Feb 2012 <redacted> +0530
Subject: Easiest Way to Plan Your Vacation to India
From: Hello Travel <helpdesk@hellotravel.com>
To: <redacted>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
X-Sendgrid-EID: <redacted>
X-Sendgrid-ID: <redacted>