Friday, November 30, 2012

Toyota Scam


Different scams land in my scam box every day. My scam box is my spam email box.

If all the lottery wins were true, I would be making millions every week. Actually according to one scammer, who sent me an email just now, I have just won $2.5 million in the Toyota Car Lottery International Promotions Thailand. All I have to do to pick up my money is contact Dr. Yousef Vugar. David   Idan, the claim agent, Toyota Lottery Thailand Branch, Email:toyotalottreyprom@yahoo.co.jp Phone Contact : +66800728539

Dr. Youself Vugar (probably a misspelling of vulgar) is only too willing to help me claim my prize providing I provide him with my full name, country, telephone number, occupation, age and sex.
Naturally, as a valued recipient of the company’s generosity and in order for me to be protected from schemers, scammers and fraudulent people, the following warning is provided for my convenience.
WARNING: Keep your winning information’s confidential until your claims are processed and your fund remitted to you in your bank account. This is part of our precautionary measure to avoid double  claiming and unwarranted abuse of this program by some unscrupulous elements.
Digitally signed by
Dr Yousef Vugdar (vulgar, not vugdar, nor Vugar)
(V.P. Finance)
Toyota Motors Corporation Ltd
www. Toyota .co.th.

Honestly, I am amazed that anybody would be foolish enough to respond to an email of this sort. The scammers try desperately to convince me that the reason this mail happened to be sent out to me in particular was because of my activity on the internet. It just so happens twelve people every year are selected from Microsoft, Hotmail, Yahoo, Gmail accounts, company domains, and other providers to win $2.5 million.

How fortunate can a person be.  There must be billions of email accounts. And I was one of the lucky few.

It is amazing that anybody would even bother responding to an email scam of this nature. There are so many of them that every day they are arrive in the junk box.

The junk box is not something that I usually check. However, of late I have been looking in it to see what the scammers are trying to do, because of an attempt to scam me via a more sophisticated means through the ruse of a woman looking for a partner. This was a well thought out stratagem that incorporated all the hallmarks of legitimacy, except there were many telltale signs that for any discerning person indicated that this was a scam. Although, at times, I was thinking that it just might not be a scam, although the alarm bells were always ringing, even when I put them on silent. This is what we have to be careful of these days.  Crafty crooks who devise strategies to mislead us into thinking that we want to help someone out in their misfortune.

The blatant scams , of which there are many, are easy to spot.  When  scammers has information they have obtained from a legitimate source, they are able to get their emails into your inbox and this presents a problem, especially if a person is feeling a little lonesome, a little depressed or not on top of their game for some reason.

But if you really want to get on top of your game, if you want have something to do with your time, then become a blogger and make some money.  In which case, check this site out by clicking here.

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

Indian Scammers and Illegal Bookmakers


The number of scams hitting my junk mail box does not appear to be increasing. Up until my recent experience with the Azerbaijani woman who tried to set me for a scam, so I would become the sucker who was forking out money to forward stolen funds via Western Union to her.

What I have noticed is that there is a high probability that many of these scams are coming out of India. When I was first contacted by the Azerbaijani woman in the attempt to scam me, I noticed that the email address was from India. Then when I answered her email, because I was curious to know how she obtained my information from an organization which no longer had the right for the last two and half years to retain or pass on any of my information to anyone, her email address changed to a German address.

Only yesterday, I noticed that another email came from an NZ which I assume is New Zealand. A little checking and I notice that many of the scam emails in the junk box have sender addresses as coming from one country and the return address is to an account to another country. These scammers are easily able to obtain email addresses, but they will have to possess an I.P. address—an internet protocol address that is managed by the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority. What this means is it is possible to trace scammers, even though they are able to move around and avoid detection.

In a way, we could see these scammers as being a highly organized criminal activity that operate similarly to the illegal bookmakers who operate off course. The illegal bookmakers would set up a telephone answering facility in an empty apartment, office block, warehouse, or factory and move to another location after a few days. This way, once the authorities got an idea of where they might be located, the bookies would packing up their last phone and leaving via the back door as the police and feds are about to announce their presence. It a game of hide and seek, only this game is not for children. The same could easily be going on when it comes to scammers on the internet. It is possible to set up facilities in every country and move around locations and use different email addresses via the telecommunications satellite system.

In some respects, it might seem to be just as easy to track the movements of these crime gangs changing I.P. addresses as what it would be to track a vehicle with the GPS (global positioning system)—except, there is move activity going on around us in the domain of the wireless network of satellite communication, than what would be happening with in all the beehives in the USA. Not only have we got internet communication, we have cell phones, radio, television, defence systems and more than technology than I could think of using the satellite systems. What this means is once the IP address of the scammers has been identified, once the ground  troops are marshaled for action, the scammers are gone. It is like the boy who cried wolf, when there was none to be found, the authorities start thinking about wasted time.

Seriously, who wants to be a time waster? The internet is there to be used and we may as well make use of it. Nonetheless, we owe it to ourselves to be responsible to ourselves for what we do. The same applies to what our life entails here on Earth. If you are looking for real answers, you need to read The Ten Commandment Truths Exposed, learn more here passport to freedom
or you could always click here