About damn time. If I ever get another email asking me to go to Nigeria on behalf of Mr.Ngkoskusomethingoranother for some large sum of cash I could just...
posted by lostbyanecho (12 comments total)
And all this time I thought I was special, that Mr. Ngkoskusomethingoranother had picked me because of my stellar social responsibility. I'm so disappointed. posted by Poagao at 2:55 AM on May 24, 2002
This is the best news I've heard in a long time. These guys have been going for ages. I used to get their offers through the post/mail back in the 80s. I also know someone who fell for it - for a while at least. Will we ever find out how much they took? posted by zimbobzim at 4:04 AM on May 24, 2002
i received yet another one of these this morning... if they've been busted why are they still spamming me...? i guess there's probably more than one of these operations, but it was from a mr. unpronouncable of nigeria...
what i really don't understand is how anyone falls prey to this sort of scam. posted by t r a c y at 4:19 AM on May 24, 2002
Once, whilst drunk, I forwarded one of these Nigeria e-mails to both the US Secret Service (wire fraud?) and the UK Serious Fraud Office. Strangely no reply from either... posted by prentiz at 4:42 AM on May 24, 2002
A new version is now making the rounds, involving an American soldier trying to get terrorist drug money out of Afghanistan. posted by nickmark at 6:46 AM on May 24, 2002
zimbobzim, don't celebrate so quickly. This is just one node of the scam, which is but a single well-known scam operated by Nigerians. Unfortunately, there's a lot of accumulated experience in how to run them. I doubt that this single arrest will eliminate the scam, just as arresting one three-card monte team doesn't wipe the scourge off the streets or subways. posted by dhartung at 8:15 AM on May 24, 2002
I not know what talk you about! I invest small noodles with Nigerian Friendlys and make 35 MILLION US DOLLARS. Opportunity you have up passed unforgivable.
Sounds pretty much like the government run lotteries...just another way to fleece ignorant dreamers. posted by HTuttle at 10:13 AM on May 24, 2002
the eWeek "gossip columnist" mentions the scam from time to time, and a few weeks ago said he'd read it "reportedly is the third- to fifth-largest industry there" (full column) so probably no cause for celebration yet.
(myself, I've never gotten a copy of this particular bit of spam. not that I want it, either....) posted by epersonae at 11:33 AM on May 24, 2002
The BBC has reported a list of the top ten e-mail scams for last year, and the Nigerian scheme is on there. People are dumb. posted by Ufez Jones at 12:06 PM on May 24, 2002
I got a nice friendly one from a Mr Tutu of South Africa this morning. He was very keen on giving me a million pound, due to my excellent credentials.
Any man who suspects I have excellent credentials or indeed any money to be scammed out of needs their head examined. posted by none at 12:30 PM on May 24, 2002
Appearing next in your inbox: appeals for $$$ to fund some sort of legal defense fund for these hoaxsters, after which you will be generously reimbursed following the release of their now-frozen assets. posted by davidmsc at 12:02 AM on May 25, 2002
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posted by Poagao at 2:55 AM on May 24, 2002