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Thread: Hoax emails

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    Cranbourne West
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    72
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    Default Hoax emails

    I received an email from a well meaning friend today, the text was as follows:

    Read this item and pass it on to your friends and love ones

    This is for Australian phone numbers!


    REMEMBER: Mobile Phone Numbers Go Public next month.

    REMINDER all mobile phone numbers are being released to telemarketing companies and you will start to receive sale calls. fficeffice" />>>

    YOU WILL BE CHARGED FOR THESE CALLS

    Below is a link where you can enter your phone numbers online to put an end to telemarketing calls. Don't just delete those calls otherwise you will find that you have been signed up for all sorts of extra services that you didn't want or know about. Like special chimes, music etc. >>

    https://www.donotcall.gov.au/ >>


    I know that telemarketing calls are a right royal PITA so I googled "Mobile Phone Numbers Go Public next month" and got this result. I hate these hoax emails just as much as telemarketers because they're sent by "well meaning" friends. I wish people would check things out before fowarding hoaxes on.
    Last edited by Grumpy John; 25th March 2009 at 05:19 PM. Reason: Typo
    To grow old is inevitable.... To grow up is optional

    Confidence, the feeling you have before you fully understand the situation.

    What could possibly go wrong.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Location
    Brisbane
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    Default

    I could be wrong, but from memory, some people in the US pay for incoming calls and text, dependingon their phone company and plan. Given that it looks like this email is a rip off of a US one, I guess it's plausible that some people over there do in fact pay to receive marketing calls.

    Peter
    The other day I described to my daughter how to find something in the garage by saying "It's right near my big saw". A few minutes later she came back to ask: "Do you mean the black one, the green one, or the blue one?".

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
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    Tallahassee FL USA
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    Default

    IF I perceived a need for a mobile phone, I would make sure it didn't charge me for incoming calls, or that it has some ironclad protections for me. Our Federal do-not-call registry is free; for Florida government registry, there's a fee, which stinks IMHO.

    Regarding the hoax e-mails, I never forward such BS. And I check things out, too.

    Your signature line says it better: "To grow up is optional." These things are pretty much juvenile mischief, not terrorism per se. A criminal enterprise would have some sort of benefit to the instigator, which this one doesn't seem to have.

    Cheers,
    Joe
    Of course truth is stranger than fiction.
    Fiction has to make sense. - Mark Twain

  4. #4
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    Default

    Joe, I hadn't realised until I read your post that my tag line could be interpreted two ways. My meaning is that although you grow old you should remain young at heart and retain the enquiring mind of a younger person. It does not, however mean you should engage in juvenile activities.
    To grow old is inevitable.... To grow up is optional

    Confidence, the feeling you have before you fully understand the situation.

    What could possibly go wrong.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    Tallahassee FL USA
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    Default

    I agree with your interpretation too, John. But I also took it the other way; too good to pass up.

    Cheers,
    Joe
    Of course truth is stranger than fiction.
    Fiction has to make sense. - Mark Twain

  6. #6
    Join Date
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    Location
    Oberon, NSW
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Grumpy John View Post
    It does not, however mean you should engage in juvenile activities.
    Spoilsport.

    Personally, these things don't worry me. I didn't ask for it? One CLICK on the delete button and it's gone.



    What annoys the living daylights out of me, are people who use sites like Zorpa and other "on-line social sites." I give these people my e-mail address so that they can send me personal e-mails... not so they can join one of these sites and supply that damned site with my addy so they can "invite me" to also join. They wanna chat with me? Send me a bloody e-mail (or join the WWForums ) fer Chrissake!

    Every day I receive a barrage of spam saying "=insert=name=here= has invited me to join =insert=site=here=." often three or four identical posts in the same day. As far as I can work out, my mate is addicted to these sites, as I'm now on the mailing list of some 6 of 'em... and I've confirmed he's a member at all.

    The worst of it is, now I'm getting spam from completely unrelated sites, that my idiot mate didn't have anything to do with... I suspect =insert=site=here= is simply sharing their mailing lists with anyone with a few pennies to spare.

    Sometimes I hate my friends...


    Oh... and if anyone reading this happens to be working for Zorpa or MyDailyFlog or ProjectW or even Diplomas/Viagra/Dates4Free... listen very, very carefully: **** ***!!

    I may be weird, but I'm saving up to become eccentric.

    - Andy Mc

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
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    Tallahassee FL USA
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    Default

    "Dear Lord, please protect me from my friends; I can handle my enemies."

    Villars Marshall de 1653-1734 (Thought I'd never find it)
    Of course truth is stranger than fiction.
    Fiction has to make sense. - Mark Twain

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Oct 2003
    Location
    Sydney,Australia
    Posts
    42

    Default

    Apparently some of these site use software to copy their victim's e-mail address book - and by 'victim' I mean anyone who visits their site. Grouply or some such has been particularly cursed on several mail lists as they lifted the group address from some unsuspecting member's software - he didn't join, just viewed the site - and sprayed everyone with their cr@p.

    You can spot some 'hoax' or just plain moronic emails when they start referring to Social Security numbers when they claim to be from Australia.

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