Great Advice On Those Irritating Forwarded Emails

Redwolf8812

Running on Faith
Joined
Oct 12, 2007
Messages
108
The man that sent this information is a computer tech. He spends a lot of time clearing the junk off computers for people and listens to complaints about speed. All forwards are not bad, just some. Be sure you read the very last paragraph.

He wrote:
By now, I suspect everyone is familiar with snopes.com and/or truthorfiction.com for determining whether information received via email is just that: true/false or fact/fiction. Both are excellent sites.

Advice from snopes.com VERY IMPORTANT!!
1) Any time you see an email that says "forward this on to '10' (or however many) of your friends", "sign this petition", or "you'll get bad luck" or "you'll get good luck" or "you'll see something funny on your screen after you send it" or whatever --- it almost always has an email tracker program attached that tracks the cookies and emails of those folks you forward to. The host sender is getting a copy each time it gets forwarded and then is able to get lists of 'active' email addresses to use in SPAM emails or sell to other spammers. Even when you get emails that demand you send the email on if you're not ashamed of God/Jesus --- that is email tracking, and they are playing on our conscience. These people don't care how they get your email addresses - just as long as they get them. Also, emails that talk about a missing child or a child with an incurable disease "how would you feel if that was your child" --- email tracking. Ignore them and don't participate!

2) Almost all emails that ask you to add your name and forward on to others are similar to that mass letter years ago that asked people to send business cards to the little kid in Florida who wanted to break the Guinness Book of Records for the most cards. All it was, and all any of this type of email is, is a way to get names and 'cookie' tracking information for telemarketers and spammers -- to validate active email accounts for their own profitable purposes.

You can do your Friends and Family members a GREAT favor by sending this information to them. You will be providing a service to your friends. And you will be rewarded by not getting thousands of spam emails in the future!

Do yourself a favor and STOP adding your name(s) to those types of listing regardless how inviting they might sound! Or make you feel guilty if you don't! It's all about getting email addresses and nothing more.

You may think you are supporting a GREAT cause, but you are NOT!

Instead, you will be getting tons of junk mail later and very possibly a virus attached! Plus, we are helping the spammers get rich! Let's not make it easy for them!

ALSO: Email petitions are NOT acceptable to Congress or any other organization - i.e. social security, etc. To be acceptable, petitions must have a "signed signature" and full address of the person signing the petition, so this is a waste of time and you are just helping the email trackers.
 
I'm going to email this to all my friends and ask that they each forward it to 10 of their friends to keep spreading the word.
 
Ummmmm......

This is actually a letter-hoax that purports to come from snopes.com, here's a link to the Snopes.Com complete article:
http://www.snopes.com/inboxer/petition/false.asp

And here is their debunking reply:
In September 2006 the missive quoted above began reaching the snopes.com inbox. In its original form, it finished with a link to our "Internet Petitions(and why They're a Waste of Your Time)" article, but that link has been subsequently left off many of the forwardings.

We don't know who wrote the e-meil, but it wasn't anyone at snopes.com, nor does the letter contain advice from us. We've never said Congress doesn't accept e-mail petitions. We've also never said anything about such petitions having "tracker programs" attached to them that harvest the e-mail address of those who sign them, nor of spammers using these petitions to amass lists of active e-mail accounts. All that came from the mind of whoever it was that penned the missive - none of it was anything snopes.com had said.

Everything we have actually said about Internet petitions is contained in out "internet Petitions (and why They're a Waste of Your Time)" article.


agnes!
 

Whoops. Guess it's all good advice anyway. When I sent this via email to my daughter, she responded "isn't THIS a forwarded email"? :rotfl2:
 
I am SO glad I never claimed to be the sharpest tool in the shed. Glad I could entertain y'all. :banana:popcorn::

LOL
 
I think I've read on snopes as well, that there is no such thing as an email tracking system that allows the sender to see who the receiver forwards an email to. It was WRT that email that Microsoft was going to send $100 to every person who forwarded the email on to 10 other people, or something like that. :rotfl2:

I'm sure someone will correct me if I'm wrong. ;)
 
I think I've read on snopes as well, that there is no such thing as an email tracking system that allows the sender to see who the receiver forwards an email to. It was WRT that email that Microsoft was going to send $100 to every person who forwarded the email on to 10 other people, or something like that. :rotfl2:

I'm sure someone will correct me if I'm wrong. ;)

I had always kind of thought that there was an e-mail tracking-system out there somewhere...
Great, another cherished belief down the drain :cool2: .

agnes!
 







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