You likely have no connection to the sender, and the email address often looks like a string of random characters or a compromised legitimate account. 3. Recommended Actions

The "information" she is supposedly asking for is often a link to a "photo" or "document" that actually downloads a Trojan or keylogger to your device.

This is a generic, automated scam. It is not a real person contacting you, and there is no "married woman" behind the message—just a bot trying to infect your computer. To help you secure your account, let me know:

Do you use on your primary accounts?