I'm not sure that link is right. It says "coming soon" with a bunch of links.
I used to love the blooming onions until one fateful evening of drinks and appetizers.
'Dirty Girls'
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
I'm not sure that link is right. It says "coming soon" with a bunch of links.
I used to love the blooming onions until one fateful evening of drinks and appetizers.
Oh, really? Guess it's been a while since I've been there, but this guy started writing back to all his spammers. Some of the responses were really off-the hook, too. Jonathan Something. Yeah, I can see how that might happen.
You can find all sorts of interesting stories by googling "scam bait" My favorite was the guys who actually got their scammers to act out (and film!) a version of the "Dead Parrot" sketch from Monty Python. I would find the link for you but I can't access YouTube from work. Searching for "scam dead parrot" would probably pay off.
I think another "scam-baiter" got the scammer to carve and mail him a sculpture of an ipod.
really?
That was from memory. He actually got two carvings - one of "Trixie and Captain Cuddlepuss" and the other of a Commodore 64 keyboard. How my memory turned that last into an Ipod I don't know.
Here is the link: [link]
It seems mean, but on the other this type of email scam is not neccesarily non-violent. If scammers find someone stupid enough they will lure them into personal contact and beat them up or kill them.
this guy started writing back to all his spammers. Some of the responses were really off-the hook, too. Jonathan Something. Yeah, I can see how that might happen.
Heh. That Jonathan inspired my other friend Jon to start a similar campaign. He had the best time spamming the spammers.
Small world! (But I wouldn't want to paint it)
I edited and made you look crazy. Sorry--I was confusing my Jonathans.
There is also an Atlantic Monthly article about the more troubling aspects of the extreme cases, the ones who turn scam baiting into a full time hobby -- basically that the mostly white scam baiters end up with tropy rooms full of photos of black people humiliating themselves.