Forum Moderators: phranque
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Didn't think the e-mail would violate TOS since it wasn't anything "official"
[edited by: Woz at 11:36 pm (utc) on Mar. 29, 2005]
[edit reason] no emails please, see TOS#9 [/edit]
Sure, fool, I'll give you my name, account numbers and passwords, personal information, and as a bonus, I'll give you 48 hours to clear out my bank account!
The sad thing is that many have been victim to these "phish" scams. They look so real in so many ways.
Kay
I asked a friend who collected foreign stamps if he wanted them. He said that most Nigerian stamps were counterfiet. The government of Nigeria looked the other way because the scammer brought in money and helped the local economy.
At that time, as I soon found out, the scam was well known amoung business owners. But then along came international e-mail.
I found a site about Nigerian scams they said there have only been two reported people that have ever been scammed. One was for $1000 the other for $30,000. I hate to be either of those guys.
Well, I've read stories about lots of others. As PT Barnum says, "There is a sucker born every minute ..." But that was before the population explosion. Now there are quite a few suckers born every minute.
EVO
I know a guy who fell for a nigerian scam email. Anybody stupid enough to fall for something that transparent deserves whatever happens to them as far as I'm concerned. Without suckers PT Barnum's old saying 'there's a sucker born every minute' would have to be abandonned, and then what would happen to Nigeria's burgeoning high tech sector?
I found a site about Nigerian scams they said there have only been two reported people that have ever been scammed. One was for $1000 the other for $30,000.
Um. You need to do better research.
Crackdown on £8.4m African sting [scotlandonsunday.scotsman.com]
US State Department's Report on Nigerian Fraud:
www.state.gov/www/regions/africa/naffpub.pdf