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re: This is the strangest scam email I’ve ever received

Posted on 9/24/19 at 8:52 am to
Posted by GumboPot
Member since Mar 2009
119014 posts
Posted on 9/24/19 at 8:52 am to
"sovereign juxtaposition"

Posted by Tarps99
Lafourche Parish
Member since Apr 2017
7541 posts
Posted on 9/24/19 at 10:04 am to
The strangest one I received was about wanting to turn me in for watching certain videos online while doing stuff to myself.

As I read that I thought, how and why and then realized it was a scam.

Funny thing is that a few weeks ago I was at a seminar on scams and someone said that they fell for it and had told their wife and eventually told their boss who told them that it was a scam.
Posted by Thib-a-doe Tiger
Member since Nov 2012
35459 posts
Posted on 9/24/19 at 10:06 am to
You got an invitation to join the Illuminati


Respond in the affirmative post haste
Posted by illuminatic
Manipulating politicans&rappers
Member since Sep 2012
6962 posts
Posted on 9/24/19 at 11:37 am to
quote:

Oh ok I’m not Tech savvy like that I’m an ole fashioned baw



You're in luck! If you send me a $10 Amazon gift card, to the aforementioned email address, I'll teach you how to take a screenshot AND you can join our secret society.
Posted by LegendInMyMind
Member since Apr 2019
54767 posts
Posted on 9/24/19 at 12:03 pm to
Well, it is clear that the scammers invested in a dictionary or a word-a-day calendar. I've never seen a vocabulary that advanced in an email scam before.
Posted by Tarps99
Lafourche Parish
Member since Apr 2017
7541 posts
Posted on 9/25/19 at 6:47 am to
I also found this YouTube channel where a guy records scam callers and leads them on wild goose chases while pretending to be an old woman or ditsy girl.

He does everything from Social Security scammers, refund scammers, computer hackers, and more.

Kitboga YouTube channel
Posted by tidalmouse
Whatsamotta U.
Member since Jan 2009
30706 posts
Posted on 9/25/19 at 7:10 am to
Lots of big words to ask for money.
Posted by Tarps99
Lafourche Parish
Member since Apr 2017
7541 posts
Posted on 9/25/19 at 7:31 am to
quote:

Well, it is clear that the scammers invested in a dictionary or a word-a-day calendar. I've never seen a vocabulary that advanced in an email scam before.


You should read some of the operating manuals of some Chinese equipment clones. They could drop some change at least on technical writer or two to go through these books or PDFs.
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