Imagine that you have received a letter of questionable content on your e-mail. To verify the authenticity of the information contained in it, you need to identify the addressee. This is not at all difficult to do.
Instructions
Step 1
Go to your email inbox to find out the addressee. Please note that you need to use a personal computer. Mobile interfaces will not work in this case. Open the letter you are interested in. See which service it was sent from.
Step 2
If the mailbox address is similar to yours, i.e. after @ is followed by the same, for example: mail.ru, gmail.ru, yandex.ru, etc., try to go to the profile of this user. Perhaps he has indicated some personal data that will allow you to quickly identify the addressee. Look for anything that can come in handy: name, surname, age, icq, mobile phone number.
Step 3
Go to any search resource convenient for you. If you don't even have the name, surname, or at least the age of the addressee, but have icq, you can always try to find the owner of the number. Run the icq or qip program. Search for the user registered with this number.
Step 4
Review his personal information. It can contain a lot of useful information, including name, age, place of residence and mobile phone. If this method does not bring the desired results, do the following. Enter the icq number in the search bar.
Step 5
Review your results. Links to profiles on forums and in particular to pages on social networks can be helpful. Often a person, in order to indicate any contact, indicates the icq number on his page. Thus, you can find the sender of the letter.
Step 6
Go to the item "Properties" of the letter. There you can see some useful information, for example, such as the ip-address of the computer from which the letter was sent. If the letter is fraudulent or direct threats to its recipient, then it is best to show it directly to law enforcement officials. It is possible that this letter was sent from someone else's computer or from a fake ip-address. One way or another, in this case, you will not be able to independently establish the identity of the sender.