How should I react to chain letters?
Originally from
ftp://garbo.uwasa.fi/pc/link/tsfaqn.zip
Questions from Usenet and Timo's answers
Most importantly: Never, ever continue a chain letter!
Especially in the early days before the deluge of spam (Unsolicited Commercial Email, UCE) started,
make money fast chain letter schemes and their derivatives were the
foremost abuse of the Usenet news. But the occasional chain letters
still appear as a nuisance on the net. Not only are they against the
netiquette, but they are outright illegal in many countries. That
they appear on the net does not alter this fact in any way! For
example for the U.S. see
- ftp://garbo.uwasa.fi/pub/pc/doc-net/chain.txt
- About chain letters, from the U.S. postmaster general
-
- ftp://garbo.uwasa.fi/pc/doc-net/chain2.txt
- More on chain letters, written by R. Scott Perry
These scams come in many variations on the net. If you are a
newcomer to the Usenet news, don't do anything about it. In
particular do not become another offender by continuing the chain.
Many system administrators are quite fed up with this form of abuse.
They often will cancel the culprit's computer account without
further ado.
If you are an experienced user, you may want to notify the
relevant postmaster or abuse address. First find out where the
posting or email really came from, since the sender's address often
is forged. For example, you might use a service like SpamCop for the task. If you
decide to send an abuse notification, please bear in mind a few
obvious things. 1) Copy the full headers of the posting for her/him.
The scam postings often are forgeries just to annoy the net. The
full headers make it a bit easier to try asses this. 2) Consider
deleting most of the body of the chain-letter scam, if it serves no
informative purpose. 3) Be polite and to the point.
If you are a less experienced reader one thing you should not do is to follow up the
chain letter with a furious flame in the newsgroup(s) believing that
the perpetrator will see it. There is a good chance that the origin
is forged. Most importantly do not go and quote the entire chain
letter, or other offending material, in your followup on the
affected newsgroup. That will just compound the abuse and make
you a party of the felony, especially, since some users use such
guises to post the chain letters. (Abuse reports in the proper
channels are a natural exception.)
In this day and age there is a lot of information available by
WWW, also about chain letters and other prevalent scams such as the
Nigerian Advance Fee 419 Scam. The disadvantage here is that there
is no guarantee how long the
links will stay current, but here are some pointers:
There are a
number of Usenet newsgroups which have more information on errant
behavior on the net.
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