What I found out from an AOL Host, WR.

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In a message dated 5/30/2004 5:55:58 PM Pacific Daylight Time, 
PhotoRoy6@xxxxxxx writes:

In a message dated 5/30/04 9:48:27 PM, WRGill writes:
So the question becomes;
does the AOL service see the embedded image as an atttached file or not?
If it sees it as an attached file we (at least at AOL) are ok.
"AOL now automatically scans every e-mail attachment you send or receive for 
viruses, worms and Trojan horses. This service is free and does not require 
you to upgrade or download any software -- AOL does it all for you. The 
scanning 
takes place on all versions of AOL software on both PC and Mac."  

Dear WRGill,
This news I had not heard of, but this is good to know. The reason they're 
scanning attachments is the same thing virus software does on your own computer 
when you insert a floppy disk or other disk; it scans it looking for any 
nasties that are harmfull. Be happy they're doing this.

I can't receive embedded images most of the time. I think it's a problem of 
the older aol version I'm using on the Mac, so I can only receive attachments. 
Viruses can't be in the body of an email anyway; they have to be an attachment 
usually of an executable file or like a macro attached to Microsoft Word 
file. The nice thing is most all Mac's won't run an executable file. Most viruses 
are written for PC Windows machines anyway.  Mac users have better things to 
do than write viruses, lol.
Anyway, thanks for your note and hope this info helps too.
Host Nikon


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