The word "Spam" as applied to Email means Unsolicited Bulk Email ("UBE").
Unsolicited means that the Recipient has not granted verifiable permission for the message to be sent. Bulk means that the message is sent as part of a larger collection of messages, all having substantively identical content.
A message is Spam only if it is both Unsolicited and Bulk.
- Unsolicited Email is normal email
(examples: first contact enquiries, job enquiries, sales enquiries)
- Bulk Email is normal email
(examples: subscriber newsletters, customer communications, discussion lists)
Technical Definition of Spam
An electronic message is "spam" IF:
(1) the recipient's personal identity and context are irrelevant because the message is equally applicable to many other potential recipients;
AND
(2) the recipient has not verifiably granted deliberate, explicit, and still-revocable permission for it to be sent.
Spam is an issue about consent, not content. Whether the UBE message is an advert, a scam, porn, a begging letter or an offer of a free lunch, the content is irrelevant - if the message was sent unsolicited and in bulk then the message is spam.
Spam is not a sub-set of UBE, it is not "UBE that is also a scam or that doesn't contain an unsubscribe link", all email sent unsolicited and in bulk is Spam.
This distinction is important because legislators spend inordinate amounts of time attempting to regulate the content of spam messages, and in doing so come up against free speech issues, without realizing that the spam issue is solely about the delivery method.
woensdag 22 april 2009
dinsdag 21 april 2009
What is Scam Baiting
Scam baiting is the practice of pretending interest in a fraudulent scheme in order to manipulate a scammer. The purpose of scam baiting might be to waste the scammers' time, embarrass him or her, cause him or her to reveal information which can be passed on to legal authorities, get him or her to waste money, or, in the great majority of cases, simply to amuse the baiter.
The primary goal of scambaiting is stopping 419 Advance fee fraud, which bilks hundreds of millions of dollars from victims, and can lead to victims committing crimes to raise enough money to feed the fraudulent schemes.
Scam baiters often simply attempt to waste the scammer's time by pretending to be a victim; they often believe if a scammer is busy communicating with a baiter, then less time is left for finding and corresponding with potential victims. In "Conversations with a Nigerian Bank Scammer", writer Karl Mamer documents verbose "conversations" over email with several Nigerian 419 scammers. After statements like "Marco, my good and soon to be prosperous friend, you have correctly intimated from my writings on religion and Elvis that indeed, like you, I whole heartily [sic] agree that the separation of church and state is both unnatural and ungodly", "Marco" finally says "I am so scared to meet you with this amount of talking".
Another common practice amongst scambaiters is to ask the scammer to do something in order to prove their identity or their intentions, such as send a photograph of himself or herself in a compromising position. Baiting forums relish in a special bait they term "safari" in which they attempt to persuade scammers into traveling long distances to meet phantom victims or to pick up bogus wire transfers.
A small number of scam baiters claim to have convinced their scammers to send money to them, although the actual occurrence of this is disputed. Tom Craig, a former Scotland Yard officer, says that it would be unprecedented for 419 con artists to part with money and suggests that scam baiters could easily forge the scanty "evidence" of such successes. Other baiters have succeeded in getting their scammers to send them art or other "trophies" as evidence of completed work for the baiter, which is, of course, never paid.
In a paper titled "Scamming the Scammers - Vigilante Justice in Virtual Communities", Lauri Tuovinen and Juha Röning of the University of Oulu, Finland address the ethical issues of Patrick Cain's "Internet's First Blood Sport". They also use the term "digilantism" to describe the subculture of scam baiting and vigilante justice on the Internet.
Source: wikipedia
The primary goal of scambaiting is stopping 419 Advance fee fraud, which bilks hundreds of millions of dollars from victims, and can lead to victims committing crimes to raise enough money to feed the fraudulent schemes.
Scam baiters often simply attempt to waste the scammer's time by pretending to be a victim; they often believe if a scammer is busy communicating with a baiter, then less time is left for finding and corresponding with potential victims. In "Conversations with a Nigerian Bank Scammer", writer Karl Mamer documents verbose "conversations" over email with several Nigerian 419 scammers. After statements like "Marco, my good and soon to be prosperous friend, you have correctly intimated from my writings on religion and Elvis that indeed, like you, I whole heartily [sic] agree that the separation of church and state is both unnatural and ungodly", "Marco" finally says "I am so scared to meet you with this amount of talking".
Another common practice amongst scambaiters is to ask the scammer to do something in order to prove their identity or their intentions, such as send a photograph of himself or herself in a compromising position. Baiting forums relish in a special bait they term "safari" in which they attempt to persuade scammers into traveling long distances to meet phantom victims or to pick up bogus wire transfers.
A small number of scam baiters claim to have convinced their scammers to send money to them, although the actual occurrence of this is disputed. Tom Craig, a former Scotland Yard officer, says that it would be unprecedented for 419 con artists to part with money and suggests that scam baiters could easily forge the scanty "evidence" of such successes. Other baiters have succeeded in getting their scammers to send them art or other "trophies" as evidence of completed work for the baiter, which is, of course, never paid.
In a paper titled "Scamming the Scammers - Vigilante Justice in Virtual Communities", Lauri Tuovinen and Juha Röning of the University of Oulu, Finland address the ethical issues of Patrick Cain's "Internet's First Blood Sport". They also use the term "digilantism" to describe the subculture of scam baiting and vigilante justice on the Internet.
Source: wikipedia
maandag 20 april 2009
Terms used by 419 Scammers
Fall mugu (to)
To be fooled, to become victim of advance-fee fraud
Flash of account
Cause the victim's bank account to temporarily show a large credit. This is intended to induce the victim to believe in the deal and send money. The credit gets reversed by the bank when it is discovered that the original cheque or electronic transfer was fraudulent
Format
The scheme or script of an advance-fee fraud, e.g., the late dictator format (the scammer pretends to be a relative of a dictator, e.g. Maryam Abacha, "Wife" of Sani Abacha), the next of kin format, the lottery format
Guyman, guy
Scammer engaged in advance-fee fraud
Jokeman
A scambaiter
Luxcini
An investment scam involving a line of men's luxury clothing based in Beverly Hills, California
Maga, mugu, mugun, mahi, magha, mahee, mayi, mayee, mgbada(antelope)
Victim of advance-fee fraud. "Mugu" means "fool" and is often used as an insult by scam-baiters referring back to the scammer
Modalities
commonly used term for methods of funds transfer
Nwachukwu
An advanced fee fraud posing as a Stock Options trading corporation
Oga or Chairman
Boss
Owner of the job, Catcher
Scammer who makes the first contact with a victim and then passes him on to another scammer who finishes the job. The latter shares the spoil with the former.
Yahoo millionaires, yahoo boys
Scammers
Yahoo yahoo
The act of scamming, especially through the use of a Yahoo! mail address.
To be fooled, to become victim of advance-fee fraud
Flash of account
Cause the victim's bank account to temporarily show a large credit. This is intended to induce the victim to believe in the deal and send money. The credit gets reversed by the bank when it is discovered that the original cheque or electronic transfer was fraudulent
Format
The scheme or script of an advance-fee fraud, e.g., the late dictator format (the scammer pretends to be a relative of a dictator, e.g. Maryam Abacha, "Wife" of Sani Abacha), the next of kin format, the lottery format
Guyman, guy
Scammer engaged in advance-fee fraud
Jokeman
A scambaiter
Luxcini
An investment scam involving a line of men's luxury clothing based in Beverly Hills, California
Maga, mugu, mugun, mahi, magha, mahee, mayi, mayee, mgbada(antelope)
Victim of advance-fee fraud. "Mugu" means "fool" and is often used as an insult by scam-baiters referring back to the scammer
Modalities
commonly used term for methods of funds transfer
Nwachukwu
An advanced fee fraud posing as a Stock Options trading corporation
Oga or Chairman
Boss
Owner of the job, Catcher
Scammer who makes the first contact with a victim and then passes him on to another scammer who finishes the job. The latter shares the spoil with the former.
Yahoo millionaires, yahoo boys
Scammers
Yahoo yahoo
The act of scamming, especially through the use of a Yahoo! mail address.
zondag 19 april 2009
The Hitman Scam
An e-mail is sent to the victim's inbox, supposedly from a hitman who has been hired by a "close friend" of the recipient to kill him or her but will call off the hit in exchange for a large sum of money. This is usually backed up with a warning not to contact the local police or FBI, or the "hitman" will be forced to go through with the plan. This is less an advance-fee fraud and more outright extortion, but a reward can sometimes be offered in the form of the "hitman" offering to kill the man who ordered the original hit on the victim.
zaterdag 18 april 2009
Romance Scam
A recent variant is the "Romance Scam" which is a money-for-romance angle. The victim is usually approached by the scammer on an online dating service, on an Instant messenger (like Yahoo IM) or even social networking sites. The scammer claims to have become interested in the victim, and have pictures posted of an attractive person who is not actually the poster.
The scammer uses this communication to gain the victim's confidence, and then ask for money. The offending party may claim to be interested in meeting the victim, but needs some cash up front in order to book the plane, hotel room, and other expenses.
In other cases, they may claim they're trapped in a foreign country and need assistance to return, to escape imprisonment by corrupt local officials, to pay for medical expenses due to an illness contracted abroad, and so on. The scammer may also use the confidence gained by the romance angle to introduce some variant of the original Nigerian Letter scheme, such as saying they need to get money or valuables out of the country and offer to share the wealth, making the request for help in leaving the country even more attractive to the victim.
A newer version of the scam is to claim to have 'information' about the fidelity of a person's significant other which they will share for a fee. This information is garnered through social networking sites by using search parameters such as 'In a relationship' or 'Married'. Anonymous emails are first sent to attempt to verify receipt, then a new web based email account is sent along with directions on how to retrieve the information.
The scammer uses this communication to gain the victim's confidence, and then ask for money. The offending party may claim to be interested in meeting the victim, but needs some cash up front in order to book the plane, hotel room, and other expenses.
In other cases, they may claim they're trapped in a foreign country and need assistance to return, to escape imprisonment by corrupt local officials, to pay for medical expenses due to an illness contracted abroad, and so on. The scammer may also use the confidence gained by the romance angle to introduce some variant of the original Nigerian Letter scheme, such as saying they need to get money or valuables out of the country and offer to share the wealth, making the request for help in leaving the country even more attractive to the victim.
A newer version of the scam is to claim to have 'information' about the fidelity of a person's significant other which they will share for a fee. This information is garnered through social networking sites by using search parameters such as 'In a relationship' or 'Married'. Anonymous emails are first sent to attempt to verify receipt, then a new web based email account is sent along with directions on how to retrieve the information.
vrijdag 17 april 2009
Cheque Cashing Scam
Some schemes are based solely on conning the victim into cashing counterfeit cheques. The scammer will contact the victim to interest them in a "work-at-home" opportunity, or asking them to cash a cheque or money order that for some reason cannot be redeemed locally. A recently-used cover story is that the perpetrator of the scam wishes the victim to work as a "mystery shopper", evaluating the service provided by MoneyGram or Western Union locations within major retailers such as Wal-Mart.
The scammer sends the victim a cheque or money order, the victim cashes it, sends the cash to the scammer via wire transfer, and the scammer disappears. Later the forgery is discovered and the bank transaction is reversed, leaving the victim liable for the balance. Schemes based solely on cheque cashing will usually offer only a small part of the cheque's total amount, with the assurance that many more cheques will follow; if the victim buys in to the scam and cashes all the cheques, the scammer can win big in a very short period of time. Other scams such as overpayment usually result in smaller revenues for the scammer, but have a higher success rate as the scammer's request seems more believable.
Some cheque-cashing scammers use multiple victims at multiple stages of the scam. A victim in the U.S. or other "safe" country such as the UK or Canada (often the country in which the cashing victim resides) is sometimes approached with an offer to fill out cheques sent to them by the scammer and mail them to other victims who will cash the cheque and wire the money to the scammer.
The cheque mailer is usually promised a cut of the money from the scammer; this usually never occurs, and in fact the cheque mailer is often conned into paying for the production and shipping costs of the cheques. The cheque information has either been stolen or fictionalized and the cheques forged. The victim mailing the cheque is usually far easier to track (and prosecute) than the scammer, so when the cheques turn up as fraudulent, the one mailing them usually ends up not only facing federal bank fraud and conspiracy charges, but liability for the full amount of the fraudulent cheques. Because the cheque mailer is taking the fall, the scammer is even less likely to be caught, which makes it a popular variation of the scam for scammers in nations with tougher anti-fraud laws.
A variation of the cheque-cashing scheme involves owners of vacation rentals. The scammer will express interest in renting the unit for a much higher than normal rate, usually for an upcoming honeymoon, business trip, etc. The scammer also offers to pay all fees "up front" as soon as the unsuspecting unit owner agrees to the windfall rental.
Eventually a very official looking money order/cashier's cheque arrives. About this time the scammer requests that a portion of the rental fee be returned for some compelling reason...wedding called off, death in the family, business failure, etc. Due to the supposed crises, it is requested that most of the rental fee be returned via wire transfer. The unit owner in encouraged to retain "a fair amount" to compensate him for his time. The wire transfer is sent, only to find out later that the official looking cheque was indeed fake and the entire amount is charged back to the unit owner by his bank.
The scammer sends the victim a cheque or money order, the victim cashes it, sends the cash to the scammer via wire transfer, and the scammer disappears. Later the forgery is discovered and the bank transaction is reversed, leaving the victim liable for the balance. Schemes based solely on cheque cashing will usually offer only a small part of the cheque's total amount, with the assurance that many more cheques will follow; if the victim buys in to the scam and cashes all the cheques, the scammer can win big in a very short period of time. Other scams such as overpayment usually result in smaller revenues for the scammer, but have a higher success rate as the scammer's request seems more believable.
Some cheque-cashing scammers use multiple victims at multiple stages of the scam. A victim in the U.S. or other "safe" country such as the UK or Canada (often the country in which the cashing victim resides) is sometimes approached with an offer to fill out cheques sent to them by the scammer and mail them to other victims who will cash the cheque and wire the money to the scammer.
The cheque mailer is usually promised a cut of the money from the scammer; this usually never occurs, and in fact the cheque mailer is often conned into paying for the production and shipping costs of the cheques. The cheque information has either been stolen or fictionalized and the cheques forged. The victim mailing the cheque is usually far easier to track (and prosecute) than the scammer, so when the cheques turn up as fraudulent, the one mailing them usually ends up not only facing federal bank fraud and conspiracy charges, but liability for the full amount of the fraudulent cheques. Because the cheque mailer is taking the fall, the scammer is even less likely to be caught, which makes it a popular variation of the scam for scammers in nations with tougher anti-fraud laws.
A variation of the cheque-cashing scheme involves owners of vacation rentals. The scammer will express interest in renting the unit for a much higher than normal rate, usually for an upcoming honeymoon, business trip, etc. The scammer also offers to pay all fees "up front" as soon as the unsuspecting unit owner agrees to the windfall rental.
Eventually a very official looking money order/cashier's cheque arrives. About this time the scammer requests that a portion of the rental fee be returned for some compelling reason...wedding called off, death in the family, business failure, etc. Due to the supposed crises, it is requested that most of the rental fee be returned via wire transfer. The unit owner in encouraged to retain "a fair amount" to compensate him for his time. The wire transfer is sent, only to find out later that the official looking cheque was indeed fake and the entire amount is charged back to the unit owner by his bank.
donderdag 16 april 2009
Purchasing Goods and Services Scams
An increasing number of advance-fee fraud is for the con scammer to answer an ad for products and services. The scammers will offer to send a bank draft to cover the cost of the item for sale or the service. The bank draft arrives with a large surplus, the victim is asked to cash the check and Western Union the surplus.
Suppliers of services can be out of pockets for tens of thousands of dollars and sellers of products are stuck with the product and a large amount of money they lost in transferring funds via Western Union. Always ask for a phone number and make sure you contact the purchaser of services by phone to verify their identity; that's the one Achilles heels the scammers have - they have to remain anonymous.
Suppliers of services can be out of pockets for tens of thousands of dollars and sellers of products are stuck with the product and a large amount of money they lost in transferring funds via Western Union. Always ask for a phone number and make sure you contact the purchaser of services by phone to verify their identity; that's the one Achilles heels the scammers have - they have to remain anonymous.
woensdag 15 april 2009
What is a Pet Scam
Pet scams
Another scam is based on the adoption of a puppy (usually English Bulldogs or Yorkshire Terriers; a cute, expensive breed coveted by families who cannot afford them) or an exotic pet such a parrots or reptiles. A scammer first posts an advertisement or sets up a web page offering puppies for adoption or for sale at a ridiculously low price, most often using stolen pictures from other websites and respectable breeders.
When a victim responds to the ad and questions the lowered price or the reason for giving up such an adorable and expensive pet, the scammer first explains that they have recently moved to Nigeria or Cameroon from the US for work (usually volunteer work as missionaries) or for studies, and claims either to have no time to properly care for the pet, that the weather has had such a terrible toll on the pet or that they have too many pets to care for.
The scammer and victim will exchange a few emails to build trust. Once it is established that the victim offers the right home for the pet, the scammer will then offer to ship the pet and requests that the victim only pay for shipping or comes off the original price substantially to seem legit. The victim, who now has an emotional attachment to the pet, feels obligated and even happy to do so, as shipping is a small price to pay compared to the pet's full price at a shop or breeder.
The scammer requests Western Union or MoneyGram to keep the deal going in a timely fashion as the pet is ready to go to a new home and the victim is now excited. However, after wiring money, the victim will not receive the pet (as the pets don't exist), and if the victim does hear from the scammer again it is only for more money (to get puppy out of airport holding, or to pay unexpected vet bills that have come up) until the victim stops responding.
Another scam is based on the adoption of a puppy (usually English Bulldogs or Yorkshire Terriers; a cute, expensive breed coveted by families who cannot afford them) or an exotic pet such a parrots or reptiles. A scammer first posts an advertisement or sets up a web page offering puppies for adoption or for sale at a ridiculously low price, most often using stolen pictures from other websites and respectable breeders.
When a victim responds to the ad and questions the lowered price or the reason for giving up such an adorable and expensive pet, the scammer first explains that they have recently moved to Nigeria or Cameroon from the US for work (usually volunteer work as missionaries) or for studies, and claims either to have no time to properly care for the pet, that the weather has had such a terrible toll on the pet or that they have too many pets to care for.
The scammer and victim will exchange a few emails to build trust. Once it is established that the victim offers the right home for the pet, the scammer will then offer to ship the pet and requests that the victim only pay for shipping or comes off the original price substantially to seem legit. The victim, who now has an emotional attachment to the pet, feels obligated and even happy to do so, as shipping is a small price to pay compared to the pet's full price at a shop or breeder.
The scammer requests Western Union or MoneyGram to keep the deal going in a timely fashion as the pet is ready to go to a new home and the victim is now excited. However, after wiring money, the victim will not receive the pet (as the pets don't exist), and if the victim does hear from the scammer again it is only for more money (to get puppy out of airport holding, or to pay unexpected vet bills that have come up) until the victim stops responding.
dinsdag 14 april 2009
What is a Fraud Recovery Scam
Fraud recovery scams
This variant targets former victims of scams. The scammer contacts the victim saying that their organization can track and apprehend the scammer and recover the money lost by the victim, for a price. Alternatively, the scammer may say that a fund has been set up by the Nigerian government to compensate victims of 419 fraud, and all that is required is proof of loss (which usually includes personal information) and a processing and handling fee to release the amount of the claim.
The scammer is counting on the victim's dire need to recover their lost money, as well as the fact that they have fallen victim before and are therefore susceptible to such scams. Often, these scams are perpetrated by the same scammer who conned the victim in the first place, as an attempt to ensure the scammer gets every penny possible from the victim.
Alternately, the original scammer will "sell" a list of the people he has scammed but who have ceased contact to another scammer who runs the recovery scam. Sometimes the scammer impersonates the foremost "fraud related crime-fighters" in Nigeria, the EFCC (Economic and Financial Crimes Commission), which not only adds credibility to the scam, but tarnishes the reputation of the EFCC once this second scam is discovered.
This variant targets former victims of scams. The scammer contacts the victim saying that their organization can track and apprehend the scammer and recover the money lost by the victim, for a price. Alternatively, the scammer may say that a fund has been set up by the Nigerian government to compensate victims of 419 fraud, and all that is required is proof of loss (which usually includes personal information) and a processing and handling fee to release the amount of the claim.
The scammer is counting on the victim's dire need to recover their lost money, as well as the fact that they have fallen victim before and are therefore susceptible to such scams. Often, these scams are perpetrated by the same scammer who conned the victim in the first place, as an attempt to ensure the scammer gets every penny possible from the victim.
Alternately, the original scammer will "sell" a list of the people he has scammed but who have ceased contact to another scammer who runs the recovery scam. Sometimes the scammer impersonates the foremost "fraud related crime-fighters" in Nigeria, the EFCC (Economic and Financial Crimes Commission), which not only adds credibility to the scam, but tarnishes the reputation of the EFCC once this second scam is discovered.
maandag 13 april 2009
What is a Bomb scam?
In a Bomb Scam the scammer will contact a business, mall, office building or other commercial location with a bomb threat. The scammer says they will detonate the bomb unless the management of the business does as the scammer tells them. Often, the scammer says that they have the store under surveillance; however, analysis of the calls by police have established that the vast majority of threat calls are made from other states or even from outside the country. Some evidence exists that points to the scammers hacking into the store's surveillance network, but this has not been confirmed in any case and has been refuted in others. The scammer usually demands that the store management or people in the headquarters office of the store (if the store is a chain) send money via wire transfer to the scammer to spare the store and the people in it. Other demands of these scammers have been more personal and humiliating, such as demanding that everyone in the store disrobe.
Because the underlying threat in the scam is a bomb threat, local law enforcement very quickly responds to the site under threat; however, because the scammer is usually nowhere near this location, the scammer is in little if any danger of being apprehended while the scam is playing out. Law enforcement, in the meantime, cannot assume the threat is anything but genuine, and therefore can do little to intervene without risking the detonation of the bomb. The fact that the threat was in reality a scam has usually not been discovered until long after the situation is over—and the extortionist has collected the money demanded.
Because the underlying threat in the scam is a bomb threat, local law enforcement very quickly responds to the site under threat; however, because the scammer is usually nowhere near this location, the scammer is in little if any danger of being apprehended while the scam is playing out. Law enforcement, in the meantime, cannot assume the threat is anything but genuine, and therefore can do little to intervene without risking the detonation of the bomb. The fact that the threat was in reality a scam has usually not been discovered until long after the situation is over—and the extortionist has collected the money demanded.
zondag 12 april 2009
CONGRATULATIONS - Lottery SCAM
YES! I won a staggering 1 million pounds! Great...except it is a spam message :(
This is to inform you that you have won a prize money of One Million
Great Britain Pound Sterling (£1,000.000.00) for the month of
MARCH 2009 Lottery promotion which is organized by YAHOO/MSN
LOTTERY INC & WINDOWS LIVE.You are to contact the events manager.
Identification numbers:Batch number .YM 09102XM:Reff number .YM 35447XM
Winning number .DTYFM0988
However you will have to fill and submit this form to the events
manager.
(1)Full name
(2)Home Address
(3)Age
(4).Telephone Number
(5)Sex
(6)Occupation
(7)State
(8)Country
(CONTACT EVENTS MANAGER)
Name:Mr Robert Lake
E-mail:overseassclaims@hotmail.com
In Danger of Foreclosure?
The whole planet is suffering from the economic crisis. An ideal climate for spammers to promise you riches beyond your dreams and financial benefits.
One of the most common spam messages these days concerns home owners and mortgage lenders. Look what i got today in my mailbox:
One of the most common spam messages these days concerns home owners and mortgage lenders. Look what i got today in my mailbox:
In danger of foreclosure? You have options!
Don't let them take your home.
Fill out the form now to connect with:
- Home buyers who will purchase your home fast
- Mortgage lenders who can help you refinance
- Investors who will buy your home
- Loss mitigation specialists that can talk to your lender
- And more
CLICK HERE!!
To cease all future advertisements please go to:
http://prehim.com/sordnagelof?e=9ejmj5Ke25xejoj5YD29bb7.bM&m=3150413&l=1
Or simply write to:
LoanModificatio321.com, 2200 Pacific Coast Highway, Suite 312, Hermosa Beach, CA 90254
To no longer receive Advertisements from us Click here to unsubscribe, or write: Marketing Team 93 S. Jackson Street #9280 Seattle, Washington 98104-2818
What is a Charity Scam?
The scammer poses as a charitable organization soliciting donations to help the victims of a natural disaster, terrorist attack (such as the Sept. 11 World Trade Center attack), regional conflict, or epidemic. Hurricane Katrina and the 2004 tsunami were popular targets of scammers perpetrating charity scams; other more timeless scam charities purport to be raising money for cancer, AIDS or Ebola virus research, children's orphanages (scammer will pretend to work for the orphanage or a non-profit associated with it), or impersonate charities such as the Red Cross or United Way.
The scammer asks for donations, often linking to online news articles to strengthen their story of a funds drive. The scammer's victims are charitable people who believe they are helping a worthy cause and expect nothing in return. Once sent, the money is gone and the scammer often disappears, though many will attempt to keep the scam going by asking for a series of payments.
The victim may sometimes find themselves in legal trouble after deducting their supposed donations from their income taxes. United States tax law states that charitable donations are only deductible if made to a qualified non-profit organization. The scammer may tell the victim their donation is deductible and provide all necessary proof of donation, but the information provided by the scammer is fictional, and if audited, the victim faces stiff penalties as a result of the fraud.
Though these scams have some of the highest success rates especially following a major disaster, and are employed by scammers all over the world, the average loss per victim is less than other fraud schemes. This is because, unlike scams involving a large expected payoff, the victim is far less likely to borrow money to donate or donate more than they can spare.
In a related variant, the scammer will pose as a terminally ill mother, poor university student, or other down-on-their-luck person and simply beg the victim for money for college tuition, to sponsor their children, or a similar ruse. The money, they say, will be repaid plus interest by some third party at a later date (often these third parties are some fictitious agency of the Nigerian government, or the scammer themselves once a payment from someone else is made available to them).
Once the victim starts paying money to the scammer, the scammer will tell the victim that additional money is needed for unforeseen expenses, similar to most other variants; in the case of the ill mother, the children will fall ill as well and require money for a doctor's care and medicine (many scammers go as far as to say that as the sponsor of the children, the victim is legally liable for such costs), where the student might claim that a dormitory fire destroyed everything they own.
The scammer asks for donations, often linking to online news articles to strengthen their story of a funds drive. The scammer's victims are charitable people who believe they are helping a worthy cause and expect nothing in return. Once sent, the money is gone and the scammer often disappears, though many will attempt to keep the scam going by asking for a series of payments.
The victim may sometimes find themselves in legal trouble after deducting their supposed donations from their income taxes. United States tax law states that charitable donations are only deductible if made to a qualified non-profit organization. The scammer may tell the victim their donation is deductible and provide all necessary proof of donation, but the information provided by the scammer is fictional, and if audited, the victim faces stiff penalties as a result of the fraud.
Though these scams have some of the highest success rates especially following a major disaster, and are employed by scammers all over the world, the average loss per victim is less than other fraud schemes. This is because, unlike scams involving a large expected payoff, the victim is far less likely to borrow money to donate or donate more than they can spare.
In a related variant, the scammer will pose as a terminally ill mother, poor university student, or other down-on-their-luck person and simply beg the victim for money for college tuition, to sponsor their children, or a similar ruse. The money, they say, will be repaid plus interest by some third party at a later date (often these third parties are some fictitious agency of the Nigerian government, or the scammer themselves once a payment from someone else is made available to them).
Once the victim starts paying money to the scammer, the scammer will tell the victim that additional money is needed for unforeseen expenses, similar to most other variants; in the case of the ill mother, the children will fall ill as well and require money for a doctor's care and medicine (many scammers go as far as to say that as the sponsor of the children, the victim is legally liable for such costs), where the student might claim that a dormitory fire destroyed everything they own.
zaterdag 11 april 2009
A message from Laura
Today I got the following message from Laura:
begehren und geniessen...
... fühlst du dich momentan vernachlässigt? übergangen? deinen gefühlen
nicht nachkommend und gerecht werdend?
keine frau da - oder die eigene berührt dich nicht mehr? dir fehlt die
bestätigung, mann zu sein, das auch zu spüren und zu bekommen!!...
liebeshungriger mann : lass mich deine verführerin sein, dich lieb und
zärtlich umarmen, dich bewundern. lass mich dich sinnlich streicheln, dich
eroootisch massieren - lass mich deine herrliche männlichkeit spüren und
lass uns dann zusammen abheben und schweben...
..immer und immer wieder...!
http://jana.johansson.nu/
begehren...... und geniessen!
grenzen erforschen, hingabe erleben - alles kann - nichts muss!
What is a Lottery Scam
A typical lottery scam begins with an unexpected email notification that "You have won!" a large sum of money in a lottery. The recipient of the message — the target of the scam — is usually told to keep the notice secret, "due to a mix-up in some of the names and numbers," and to contact a "claims agent." After contacting the agent, the target of the scam will be asked to pay "processing fees" or "transfer charges" so that the winnings can be distributed, but will never receive any lottery payment. Many email lottery scams use the names of legitimate lottery organizations, but this does not mean the legitimate organizations are in any way involved with the scams.
There are several ways to recognise a fake lottery email:
1. Unless you have bought a ticket, you cannot have won a prize. There are no such things as "email" draws or any other lottery where "no tickets were sold". This is simply another invention by the scammer to make you believe you've won.
2. The scammer will ask you to pay a fee before you can receive your prize. It is illegal for a real lottery to charge any sort of fee. It does not matter what they say this fee is for (courier charges, bank charges, various imaginary certificates — these are all made up by the scammer to get money out of you). All real lotteries subtract any fee and tax from the prize. They never ask you to pay it in advance.
3. Scam lottery emails will nearly always come from free email accounts such as Yahoo!, Hotmail, Live, MSN, Gmail etc, and no real business will use a free email account.
Source: Wikipedia
There are several ways to recognise a fake lottery email:
1. Unless you have bought a ticket, you cannot have won a prize. There are no such things as "email" draws or any other lottery where "no tickets were sold". This is simply another invention by the scammer to make you believe you've won.
2. The scammer will ask you to pay a fee before you can receive your prize. It is illegal for a real lottery to charge any sort of fee. It does not matter what they say this fee is for (courier charges, bank charges, various imaginary certificates — these are all made up by the scammer to get money out of you). All real lotteries subtract any fee and tax from the prize. They never ask you to pay it in advance.
3. Scam lottery emails will nearly always come from free email accounts such as Yahoo!, Hotmail, Live, MSN, Gmail etc, and no real business will use a free email account.
Source: Wikipedia
vrijdag 10 april 2009
Visa Spam
Another Spam message I receive through 123greetings.com is a "free" test to check if i'm eligible to get a Green card or to work and live in the USA.
Typically these spam messages contain a script where you have to click in order to find out if you are eligible. This time it asked me my age, the type of studies I did and my professional experience. And guess what??? Yes, i'm eligible!
This "service" was provided by USAGC, and bears the stamp of www.USAGC.com.
I wonder if any of you know what that could be?
Typically these spam messages contain a script where you have to click in order to find out if you are eligible. This time it asked me my age, the type of studies I did and my professional experience. And guess what??? Yes, i'm eligible!
This "service" was provided by USAGC, and bears the stamp of www.USAGC.com.
I wonder if any of you know what that could be?
What is a 419 scam?
419 scams
Advance fee fraud spam such as the Nigerian "419" scam may be sent by a single individual from a cyber cafe in a developing country. Organized "spam gangs" operating from Russia or eastern Europe share many features in common with other forms of organized crime, including turf battles and revenge killings
An advance-fee fraud is a confidence trick in which the target is persuaded to advance sums of money in the hope of realizing a significantly larger gain. Among the variations on this type of scam, are the Nigerian Letter (also called the 419 fraud, Nigerian scam, Nigerian bank scam, or Nigerian money offer), the Spanish Prisoner, the Black money scam as well as Russian/Ukrainian scam (also extremely widespread, though far less popular than the former). Both the so-called Russian and Nigerian scams stand for wholly dissimilar organised crime traditions, they therefore tend to use altogether different breeds of approaches.
The 419 scam originated in the early 1980s as the oil-based Nigerian economy declined. Several unemployed university students first used this scam as a means of manipulating business visitors interested in shady deals in the Nigerian oil sector before targeting businessmen in the west, and later the wider population. Scammers in the early-to-mid 1990s targeted companies, sending scam messages via letter, fax, or Telex. The spread of email and easy access to email-harvesting software significantly lowered the cost of sending scam letters by utilizing the Internet. In the 2000s, the 419 scam has spurred imitations from other locations in Africa, Asia and Eastern Europe, and, more recently, from North America, Western Europe (mainly UK), and Australia.
The number "419" refers to the article of the Nigerian Criminal Code (part of Chapter 38: "Obtaining Property by false pretences; Cheating") dealing with fraud. The American Dialect Society has traced the term "419 fraud" back to 1992.
The advance-fee fraud is similar to a much older scam known as the Spanish Prisoner scam in which the trickster would tell the scam victim that a (fictitious) rich prisoner had promised to share (non-existent) treasure with the victim if the latter would send money to bribe the prison guards.
Source: Wikipedia
Advance fee fraud spam such as the Nigerian "419" scam may be sent by a single individual from a cyber cafe in a developing country. Organized "spam gangs" operating from Russia or eastern Europe share many features in common with other forms of organized crime, including turf battles and revenge killings
An advance-fee fraud is a confidence trick in which the target is persuaded to advance sums of money in the hope of realizing a significantly larger gain. Among the variations on this type of scam, are the Nigerian Letter (also called the 419 fraud, Nigerian scam, Nigerian bank scam, or Nigerian money offer), the Spanish Prisoner, the Black money scam as well as Russian/Ukrainian scam (also extremely widespread, though far less popular than the former). Both the so-called Russian and Nigerian scams stand for wholly dissimilar organised crime traditions, they therefore tend to use altogether different breeds of approaches.
The 419 scam originated in the early 1980s as the oil-based Nigerian economy declined. Several unemployed university students first used this scam as a means of manipulating business visitors interested in shady deals in the Nigerian oil sector before targeting businessmen in the west, and later the wider population. Scammers in the early-to-mid 1990s targeted companies, sending scam messages via letter, fax, or Telex. The spread of email and easy access to email-harvesting software significantly lowered the cost of sending scam letters by utilizing the Internet. In the 2000s, the 419 scam has spurred imitations from other locations in Africa, Asia and Eastern Europe, and, more recently, from North America, Western Europe (mainly UK), and Australia.
The number "419" refers to the article of the Nigerian Criminal Code (part of Chapter 38: "Obtaining Property by false pretences; Cheating") dealing with fraud. The American Dialect Society has traced the term "419 fraud" back to 1992.
The advance-fee fraud is similar to a much older scam known as the Spanish Prisoner scam in which the trickster would tell the scam victim that a (fictitious) rich prisoner had promised to share (non-existent) treasure with the victim if the latter would send money to bribe the prison guards.
Source: Wikipedia
donderdag 9 april 2009
Spam through Hospex
Some hospitality exchange networks (hospex) are a target for Dating Spam. Not surprising, as you see that one of the biggest dinosaur (Hospitality Club) even puts dating advertisments on their website. Signing up with HC means having to clean out your mailbox.
This is an example I received today:
This is an example I received today:
Dear Friend,
I am very happy for good news on your profile with
HC.Please do me this and looking forward for any
responec.I am kown as Gamba in HC.
I am Kenyan-32 -years old loving, caring, hardworking
single man with a daughter, living and working in
Mombasa,i would like to meet any good woman to be my
soulmate, who is ready for a relationship leading to
marriage.She should be single, caring of any age,any
race and honest.Indeed, i need somebody to make my
dream and fantasies a reallty.She be ready to travel
to Kenya.Anybody for me?
MY email is fauma5@yahoo.com and my cellphone is
+254733568369.You can call me any time.Thanks
With LOVE Francis
What are the most common items advertised in Spam
According to information compiled by Spam-Filter-Review.com, E-mail spam for 2006 can be broken down as follows:
E-Mail Spam by Category
Products : 25%
Financial : 20%
Adult : 19%
Scams : 9%
Health : 7%
Internet : 7%
Leisure : 6%
Spiritual : 4%
Other : 3%
Rolex watches and Viagra-type drugs are two common products advertised in spam e-mail.
E-Mail Spam by Category
Products : 25%
Financial : 20%
Adult : 19%
Scams : 9%
Health : 7%
Internet : 7%
Leisure : 6%
Spiritual : 4%
Other : 3%
Rolex watches and Viagra-type drugs are two common products advertised in spam e-mail.
How can you tell a message is Spam?
There are several indications that can help you determine whether a message is spam, although you can never be 100% that something isn't spam.
Here are some guidelines that might help you:
- is the message sent directly to you? If your address appears in the To field, it is less likely to be spam. Most spammers mask the addresses they send their messages to.
- Is the message from a well-known company or organization, possibly one you are affiliated with? Then it is more likely not to be spam. If you receive a message from a Bank that you have no business with, you should be careful.
- Does the message indicate the email address that you are subscribed with?
- Does the message tell you where you signed up and agreed to receive the messages?
- Is your real name used in the body of the message?
- Are you given a web link or a specific email address to unsubscribe? (Note: Never reply to a message you believe may be spam. This will only confirm to the spammer they have targeted a valid email address.). Also be careful when clicking on a link. It is safer to copy the link into a new browser window.
- Can you enter the domain (or a slight variation of) of the sender into a web browser and open the page of a legitimate business? For example, a message from the sender gwmag@novell.com, novell.com could be copied and pasted into a browser and you'll be taken to Novell's home page.
Here are some guidelines that might help you:
- is the message sent directly to you? If your address appears in the To field, it is less likely to be spam. Most spammers mask the addresses they send their messages to.
- Is the message from a well-known company or organization, possibly one you are affiliated with? Then it is more likely not to be spam. If you receive a message from a Bank that you have no business with, you should be careful.
- Does the message indicate the email address that you are subscribed with?
- Does the message tell you where you signed up and agreed to receive the messages?
- Is your real name used in the body of the message?
- Are you given a web link or a specific email address to unsubscribe? (Note: Never reply to a message you believe may be spam. This will only confirm to the spammer they have targeted a valid email address.). Also be careful when clicking on a link. It is safer to copy the link into a new browser window.
- Can you enter the domain (or a slight variation of) of the sender into a web browser and open the page of a legitimate business? For example, a message from the sender gwmag@novell.com, novell.com could be copied and pasted into a browser and you'll be taken to Novell's home page.
Internet Accelarator
One of the typical Spam messages we receive from 123greetings.com is the following:
Dear 123Greetings user,
Your PC may be suffering from serious memory leaks which may be the reason why your PC is running so slow.
Below are instructions that will enable you to Increase Your Computer's Speed, Power, Stability and Reliability in Just Five Minutes:
Press here to learn more and to receive the simple set up instructions.
Our software will increase your computer SPEED up to 400%, as well as increasing your Internet SPEED!
Completely AUTOMATIC, EASY TO INSTALL, Even easier to use, and No Computer Knowledge Needed!
Learn for yourself why we're recommended by ZDNet, PC Magazine, CNet, and Millions of Users!
Press here to download.
-----
If you feel that you are receiving this email in error or are not interested in receiving future Internet Accelerator offers please click here.
or contact us via regular mail at:
6965 El Camino Real
Suite 105 - 698
La Costa, CA 92009
Dear 123Greetings user,
Your PC may be suffering from serious memory leaks which may be the reason why your PC is running so slow.
Below are instructions that will enable you to Increase Your Computer's Speed, Power, Stability and Reliability in Just Five Minutes:
Press here to learn more and to receive the simple set up instructions.
Our software will increase your computer SPEED up to 400%, as well as increasing your Internet SPEED!
Completely AUTOMATIC, EASY TO INSTALL, Even easier to use, and No Computer Knowledge Needed!
Learn for yourself why we're recommended by ZDNet, PC Magazine, CNet, and Millions of Users!
Press here to download.
-----
If you feel that you are receiving this email in error or are not interested in receiving future Internet Accelerator offers please click here.
or contact us via regular mail at:
6965 El Camino Real
Suite 105 - 698
La Costa, CA 92009
Are there different kinds of Spam?
According to a Wikipedia article, there are approximately 8 types of Spam:
Types of spam
1 Spamvertised sites
2 Most common products advertised
3 419 scams
2.4 Phishing
2.5 Appending
2.6 Image spam
2.7 Blank spam
2.8 Backscatter spam
Spam has several definitions, varying by the source.
- Unsolicited bulk e-mail (UBE)—unsolicited e-mail, sent in large quantities.
- Unsolicited commercial e-mail (UCE)—this more restrictive definition is used by regulators whose mandate is to regulate commerce, such as the U.S. Federal Trade Commission.
- Any email message that is fraudulent.
- Any email message where the sender’s identity is forged, or messages sent though unprotected SMTP servers, unauthorized proxies, or botnets
Types of spam
1 Spamvertised sites
2 Most common products advertised
3 419 scams
2.4 Phishing
2.5 Appending
2.6 Image spam
2.7 Blank spam
2.8 Backscatter spam
Spam has several definitions, varying by the source.
- Unsolicited bulk e-mail (UBE)—unsolicited e-mail, sent in large quantities.
- Unsolicited commercial e-mail (UCE)—this more restrictive definition is used by regulators whose mandate is to regulate commerce, such as the U.S. Federal Trade Commission.
- Any email message that is fraudulent.
- Any email message where the sender’s identity is forged, or messages sent though unprotected SMTP servers, unauthorized proxies, or botnets
woensdag 8 april 2009
What are Spamvertized sites?
Many spam e-mails contain URLs to a website or websites. According to a Commtouch report in June 2004, "only five countries are hosting 99.68% of the global spammer websites", of which the foremost is China, hosting 73.58% of all web sites referred to within spam.
Beware of 123greetings.com
Once I registered with 123greetings.com after receiving an email with a birthday card attached. I could only retrieve the card AFTER registering with this website, and since then I have been receiving dozens of mails from a webaddress calling itself "specials@123greetings.biz".
I have been trying to unsubscribe from this list, but things are getting worse. Most of the spam I receive through them concern Casino or Poker games, Visa & Green Card lotteries and Free Hollywood movies.
I have been trying to unsubscribe from this list, but things are getting worse. Most of the spam I receive through them concern Casino or Poker games, Visa & Green Card lotteries and Free Hollywood movies.
What is e-mail Spam?
E-mail spam, also known as junk e-mail, is a subset of spam that involves nearly identical messages sent to numerous recipients by e-mail. A common synonym for spam is unsolicited bulk e-mail (UBE). Definitions of spam usually include the aspects that email is unsolicited and sent in bulk. "UCE" refers specifically to unsolicited commercial e-mail.
E-mail spam has steadily, even exponentially grown since the early 1990s to several billion messages a day. Spam has frustrated, confused, and annoyed e-mail users. Laws against spam have been sporadically implemented, with some being opt-out and others requiring opt in e-mail. The total volume of spam (over 100 billion emails per day as of April 2008) has leveled off slightly in recent years, and is no longer growing exponentially. The amount received by most e-mail users has decreased, mostly because of better filtering. About 80% of all spam is sent by fewer than 200 spammers. Botnets, networks of virus-infected computers, are used to send about 80% of spam. Since the cost of the spam is borne mostly by the recipient, it is effectively postage due advertising.
E-mail addresses are collected from chatrooms, websites, newsgroups, and viruses which harvest users' address books, and are sold to other spammers. Much of spam is sent to invalid e-mail addresses. ISPs have attempted to recover the cost of spam through lawsuits against spammers, although they have been mostly unsuccessful in collecting damages despite winning in court.Spam averages 94% of all e-mail sent.
Source: Wikipedia
E-mail spam has steadily, even exponentially grown since the early 1990s to several billion messages a day. Spam has frustrated, confused, and annoyed e-mail users. Laws against spam have been sporadically implemented, with some being opt-out and others requiring opt in e-mail. The total volume of spam (over 100 billion emails per day as of April 2008) has leveled off slightly in recent years, and is no longer growing exponentially. The amount received by most e-mail users has decreased, mostly because of better filtering. About 80% of all spam is sent by fewer than 200 spammers. Botnets, networks of virus-infected computers, are used to send about 80% of spam. Since the cost of the spam is borne mostly by the recipient, it is effectively postage due advertising.
E-mail addresses are collected from chatrooms, websites, newsgroups, and viruses which harvest users' address books, and are sold to other spammers. Much of spam is sent to invalid e-mail addresses. ISPs have attempted to recover the cost of spam through lawsuits against spammers, although they have been mostly unsuccessful in collecting damages despite winning in court.Spam averages 94% of all e-mail sent.
Source: Wikipedia
Message from Andrea
Ab in den Frühling
Der Winter ist endlich vorbei. Nun kommen wieder die sonnigen und heißenTagen, welche man z.B. gerne draussen verbringt (keine Angst, bin aber manchmal eine Stubenhockerin). Dazu suche ich dich: Einen Partner, der mich durch dick und dünn begleitet, auf mich eingehen kann, weiss was er will mit dem gewissen Etwas, der sinnliche sowie romantische Stunden geniesst und Humor hat.
http://mandy.rcbil.nu/
Selber bringe ich auch all diese Eigenschaften mit. Bei mir ist immer was los. Bin sehr aktiv und unternehmenslustig und sehe ganz nett aus .
Möchtest du mich in den Sommer begleiten? Dann freue ich mich auf dein Mail .
Der Winter ist endlich vorbei. Nun kommen wieder die sonnigen und heißenTagen, welche man z.B. gerne draussen verbringt (keine Angst, bin aber manchmal eine Stubenhockerin). Dazu suche ich dich: Einen Partner, der mich durch dick und dünn begleitet, auf mich eingehen kann, weiss was er will mit dem gewissen Etwas, der sinnliche sowie romantische Stunden geniesst und Humor hat.
http://mandy.rcbil.nu/
Selber bringe ich auch all diese Eigenschaften mit. Bei mir ist immer was los. Bin sehr aktiv und unternehmenslustig und sehe ganz nett aus .
Möchtest du mich in den Sommer begleiten? Dann freue ich mich auf dein Mail .
dinsdag 7 april 2009
Message from Kiara
I received the following Message from Kiara, a classic example of Dating Spam
"Hallo freu mich das du mir geschrieben hast, hast du vielleicht Lust ab und zu was zu unternehmen? Das Leben ist doch viel zu schön, um es einfach so an uns vorbei gehen zu lassen…
Ich spüre den Drang, Neues zu entdecken, neue interessante Personen kennen zu lernen, einfach wieder vermehrt aus dem Alltag auszubrechen.
Egal ob Kino, essen, trinken, kochen, wandern, laufen, schwimmen usw. oder auch einfach nur über Gott und die Welt diskutieren. Doch was das Wichtigste am Ganzen ist, dass dies alles mit einem Lachen im Gesicht getan wird, denn es heisst doch so schön, lachen ist gesund und hält anscheinend jung! Unglaublich, wie die Zeit doch an uns vorbei rast.
Und, wie kommt mein Vorschlag an? Weitere Ideen? Dann kannst du mir ja davon erzählen hier http://www.fancyurl.com/kiara
habe ich noch eine eigene seite freu mich immer über besucher dort und wenn du willst kannst du da auch direkt kontakt zu mir aufnehmen.
Ach ja, fast vergessen... auch die Liebe soll ja nicht zu kurz kommen, vielleicht gibt es ja doch noch Männer, die wissen was Liebe ist?! Denn ohne die Liebe, ist das Leben ja nur halb so schön
"Hallo freu mich das du mir geschrieben hast, hast du vielleicht Lust ab und zu was zu unternehmen? Das Leben ist doch viel zu schön, um es einfach so an uns vorbei gehen zu lassen…
Ich spüre den Drang, Neues zu entdecken, neue interessante Personen kennen zu lernen, einfach wieder vermehrt aus dem Alltag auszubrechen.
Egal ob Kino, essen, trinken, kochen, wandern, laufen, schwimmen usw. oder auch einfach nur über Gott und die Welt diskutieren. Doch was das Wichtigste am Ganzen ist, dass dies alles mit einem Lachen im Gesicht getan wird, denn es heisst doch so schön, lachen ist gesund und hält anscheinend jung! Unglaublich, wie die Zeit doch an uns vorbei rast.
Und, wie kommt mein Vorschlag an? Weitere Ideen? Dann kannst du mir ja davon erzählen hier http://www.fancyurl.com/kiara
habe ich noch eine eigene seite freu mich immer über besucher dort und wenn du willst kannst du da auch direkt kontakt zu mir aufnehmen.
Ach ja, fast vergessen... auch die Liebe soll ja nicht zu kurz kommen, vielleicht gibt es ja doch noch Männer, die wissen was Liebe ist?! Denn ohne die Liebe, ist das Leben ja nur halb so schön
Spamcontroling...you're guide to SPAM
Everybody knows what Spam is, even Monty Python sang about it:
Spam spam spam spam. Lovely spam! Wonderful spam! Spam spa-a-a-a-a-am spam spa-a-a-a-a-am spam. Lovely spam! Lovely spam! Lovely spam! Lovely spam! Lovely spam! Spam spam spam spam
But here on Spamcontroling we will publish our favourite Spam Messages. Better here than in your mailbox, right?
Spam spam spam spam. Lovely spam! Wonderful spam! Spam spa-a-a-a-a-am spam spa-a-a-a-a-am spam. Lovely spam! Lovely spam! Lovely spam! Lovely spam! Lovely spam! Spam spam spam spam
But here on Spamcontroling we will publish our favourite Spam Messages. Better here than in your mailbox, right?
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