Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Depends on how it is done, some accounts are actually hacked so you'd be blocking the real person. Others are probably as mentioned spoofed and you'd be fine to block it. However the easier thing is just to ignore it? Those spam accounts generally send you a message and if you don't reply nothing happens.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on May 25, 2018, 07:23:42 AMDepends on how it is done, some accounts are actually hacked so you'd be blocking the real person. Others are probably as mentioned spoofed and you'd be fine to block it. However the easier thing is just to ignore it? Those spam accounts generally send you a message and if you don't reply nothing happens.If an account was hacked, shouldn't the real person see these messages as sent? Or, if spoofed, is it like junk phone calls that display a different number than the one actually being used?
Quote from: Frog on May 25, 2018, 09:07:24 AMQuote from: GraphicDisorder on May 25, 2018, 07:23:42 AMDepends on how it is done, some accounts are actually hacked so you'd be blocking the real person. Others are probably as mentioned spoofed and you'd be fine to block it. However the easier thing is just to ignore it? Those spam accounts generally send you a message and if you don't reply nothing happens.If an account was hacked, shouldn't the real person see these messages as sent? Or, if spoofed, is it like junk phone calls that display a different number than the one actually being used?Both types exist is what the issue is. I have seen people on my list say someone hacked their account and they had to get the account back. Meanwhile the account was sending out messages.Then I have seen "spoofed" accounts that aren't the actual account at all. Just the persons picture/name. I am pretty sure there nothing stopping people from doing that, creating an account with any persons name they like, as long as they have a unique email.