Spam, Internet Fraud, Hoaxes, and Viruses

By : MarcHolt
Views : 518

The Internet has changed our lives, mostly for the better. But it also has the potential to cause a lot of problems. Perhaps the most obvious problems are spam email, viruses, and hoaxes.

There are ways to fight these scourges. You need to educate yourself about them. And then use all the methods possible to combat them.

SPAM EMAIL

This is the hardest Internet problem to overcome because it is so easy to harvest emails from the Internet. There are programs that will troll through websites and record each one. Increasingly, webmasters and website owners are not putting email addresses into websites where they can be easily seen. Instead, they are resorting to Inquiry Forms so that the email address is not displayed on the screen. Although this doesn't stop the harvesting programs, it does make it a little more difficult for them. If you do want to put your email address in a website, it should not be immediately visible. Some website designers are creating two or three pages the visitor has to drill down through before the email address is displayed.

Another way to cut down on the amount of spam you receive is to use spam filters to catch the spam and throw it away before it reaches you. The problem with these is that they can sometimes throw out the baby with the bathwater and you can lose emails you want to see.

The Thunderbird email program, a sister application to FireFox browser (see www.firefox.com), has a special icon on the menu bar you click to tell the program that the email you are currently looking at is spam. You can 'eductate' Thunderbird to recognize spam Junk and throw all messages it thinks are spam into a special Junk folder where you can review them before completely deleting them.

Some spam emails have a link at the bottom of the page asking you to click on it to unsubscribe from their mailing list. Never click on this link, because all it will do is confirm to the spammer that your email address is current and as a result the spammer will send you more junk emails instead.

VIRUSES

If you don't already have an anti-virus program installed on your computer you need one immediately. There are a few free ones out there and the best one I have found is AVG (http://free.grisoft.com). Download and install it, and then run the Update immediately so that you have the latest database of virus signatures when you scan your hard disk.

You should scan your hard disk for viruses at least once a week. Once a day is even better.

HOAXES

At any one time, there is likely to be many thousands of completely bogus hoax messages travelling via email. Some are new creations. Others have been circulating in various forms for years.

I am often asked why people create such hoaxes in the first place. This is an interesting question that probably has no definitive answer. For example, what could possibly motivate somebody to write and distribute a fictional message about a dying child? Why would someone author a bogus warning about a non-existent computer virus or falsely claim that a well-known company was giving away money or products?

Unlike a scammer, whose efforts may be rewarded in the form of stolen funds or stolen identities, a hoax writer does not stand to reap such a tangible reward. The motives of a scammer are not hard to ascertain. Hoaxsters, on the other hand, have motives that are less transparent.

Perhaps people most commonly start hoax emails simply to see how far, and for how long, their nonsensical messages will spread. If they create a hoax that regularly has recipients clicking on the "Forward" button, they may feel "successful" by there own twisted standards. By pulling the wool over the eyes of a substantial number of Internet users, these pranksters may feel that they have "made their mark" on society. Perhaps it is something akin to vandalism out in the "real" world. Perhaps there are similar underlying motives that drive those who create hoaxes and those who spray graffiti or slash train seats? Such vandalism may seem completely pointless to the rest of us, but the vandals must gain some intrinsic value out of it - a venting of anger against a society they resent - a sense of power - just a cheap thrill, perhaps.

Sometimes, a newly created hoax message might spread a lot further than the author originally intended. Some hoaxes start out as just a practical joke aimed squarely at a select group of friends. But the friends send it to their friends and, in short order, the message has irretrievably escaped into the wilds of Cyberspace. Some time back, a widely distributed hoax message about a group of Cambodian midgets fighting a lion started in exactly this way.

In other cases a hoax email might be originally sent out simply because the author misinterpreted something and genuinely felt compelled to let others know about it. For example, the infamous "Bonsai Kittens" website appears to have prompted one outraged visitor to create and send out an email petition calling for authorities to close down the site. However, the creator of the email petition apparently did not realize that the site was just a joke. In spite of the fact that nobody is really making Bonsai Kittens, this misguided petition continues to circulate and collect email addresses years after it was first launched.

Hoaxes might also be started solely for the purpose of discrediting a company or individual. For example, some virus hoaxes, such as the Elf Bowling hoax name a particular software program and may have been started simply because the author had some unnamed grievance and was seeking revenge.

Some have postulated that spammers deliberately create hoax emails as a way of subsequently collecting email addresses. Certainly, messages that get forwarded many times can accumulate a great many email addresses and spammers may well harvest these addresses for use on spam lists. However, generally speaking, I'm not convinced that spammers are the ones who actually create these hoaxes in the first place. For such an exercise to be successful (from the spammer's point of view), he or she would have to set up a mechanism by which the hoax messages were eventually returned after they had accumulated a large number of email addresses. Typically, email hoaxes do not have any such mechanism. If they did, it would perhaps make it possible to identify the original author.

As I said earlier, it is probably quite difficult to pinpoint one definitive reason why some individuals in the Internet community decide to create and distribute email hoaxes. Given the sometimes unfathomable complexity of human psychology, there is likely to be quite a number of reasons why people author email hoaxes and I've only touched on a few possible motives here.

 

© Marc Holt. All rights reserved by the author.


Like this story? Share it with others: Stumble It! Add to Yahoo! My Web Bookmark to Del.icio.us Bookmark to Furl Spurl This! Add to Reddit Bookmark to Newsvine


Related Articles

» Living with a Thai Girl - Hungry - Go Eat Something
» The Chronicles of Foster Foskin's Adventures in Thailand 1
» The Chronicles of Foster Foskin's Adventures in Thailand 2
» The Chronicles of Foster Foskin's Adventures in Thailand 3
» The Chronicles of Foster Foskin's Adventures in Thailand 4
» The Chronicles of Foster Foskin's Adventures in Thailand 5
» The Chronicles of Foster Foskin's Adventures in Thailand 6
» The Chronicles of Foster Foskin's Adventures in Thailand 7
» Another Wife Anyone?
» A Satisfied Mind
» What's Wrong with Eating Dog Meat?
» How to Fall in Love with a Bargirl
» It's All Lies
» Knife Attacks and Murderers
» Shootout at Mom Tri’s Boathouse
» Overland to Thailand
» Show Them Who is Boss
» Fighting Fire With Fire
» Thai Traffic Cops
» The Feminist Ideal in Thailand
» The Cartoon Teacher
» The Third Sex
» More Internet Urban Legends
» Women Drivers in Thailand
» Blame Our Confusion On Quantum Physics
» Thoughts On The Thailand Land Laws Edict
» Marry a Thai Bar Girl?
» Australia's Secret Vietman War Warriors?
» Inside the Boiler Room
» The Chronicles of Foster Foskin's Adventures in Thailand 8
» The Thai Landlord from Hell
» The Thailand Baby Snatchers
» How I Got My Thai Driving License
» The Chronicles of Foster Foskin’s Adventures in Thailand 9
» The Chronicles of Foster Foskin’s Adventures in Thailand 10
» The Chronicles of Foster Foskin’s Adventures in Thailand 11
» That Cruel Cut
» Football Anyone?
» In the Wilds of Esarn
» What's Happening to Thailand?
» The Chronicles of Foster Foskin’s Adventures in Thailand 12
» Another Shot in the Foot?
» The Chronicles of Foster Foskin’s Adventures in Thailand 14
» The Chronicles of Foster Foskin’s Adventures in Thailand 13
» Telephone Echoes
» Young or Old Woman? Which is Better?
» Hot, Wet, Bald Pussy, An Apple a Day, and the Freebie
» The Chronicles of Foster Foskin’s Adventures in Thailand 15
» The Chronicles of Foster Foskin’s Adventures in Thailand 16
» The Chronicles of Foster Foskin’s Adventures in Thailand 17
» Duped Dads
» Female Sex Tourism
» How a World Traveler Came to Thailand
» Planning to Get Married in Thailand?
» Should I Stay, or Should I Go?
» The Chronicles of Foster Foskin’s Adventures in Thailand 18
» Foster Foskin’s Agony Column 1
» Foster Foskin’s Agony Column 2
» The Expat’s Thailand Survival Guide – Chapter 1
» The Chronicles of Foster Foskin’s Adventures in Thailand 20
» The Chronicles of Foster Foskin’s Adventures in Thailand 19
» Foster Foskin’s Agony Column 3
» Foster Foskin’s Agony Column 4

Rating

Teen



Comments / Feedback

RSS 2.0: Syndicate this article

Add Comment
* Name


Site



*Image Validation (?)


*Comments / Feedback





Print Article Print Article
Send to a friend Send to a friend
Save as PDF Save as PDF
Rate this Article :

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10
Poor Excellent