TaylorMade
Mar 15, 2011, 7:45 PM
I posted this on my facebook, but I think it bears repeating...
I got this in my mailbox, and it's not the first once I've gotten.
Hello, how are you there. I was looking through many profiles today and some of them even looked interesting, but yours was one of the few that looked special! Your personality, your interests - we might get along really well. If you feel the same way, just write back, I think the two of us should give it a try! I also one important question to ask you and that is DO YOU HAVE A BIG HEART?
Regards,
sean
Yeah.... it's kinda sweet, isn't it? But - - I can say with at least 90% authority that it's a scam. It's not some sweet English college student sending it. My guess, it's either a pretender in an internet cafe in England or Nigeria, hoping I will be lonely and desperate enough to start the correspondence . . . we'll talk, laugh, and maybe he'll say within a month of daily notes and pokes that he loves me and would LOVE to come to the states to see me. Or that he has a little situation with the Home Office and needs money. . . for a visa. Or a sick relative back in the country parts of Britain. Or he is taking a semester abroad in Lagos. And then he'll take my trust and turn it into cash. . .and when he's taken all he could... he vanishes, leaving me with a broken heart and empty wallet.
419/Romance Scammers are starting to appear on Facebook. I don't think this will work for them as well as it would on other fora. But still, be vigilant with the PM's you receive, especially from those not on your contact lists. If a name sounds odd, (i.e, not consistent with the syntax of the language they claim to speak), or a PM sounds forumlaic (don't hesitate to run it through google, which is what I did), like they're in love with you already, don't respond. Delete them. If you want to run counter game on them, look to more experienced scam baiters to do this, especially if this is your first time. Remember, wise as a serpent, gentle as a dove.
*Taylor*
I got this in my mailbox, and it's not the first once I've gotten.
Hello, how are you there. I was looking through many profiles today and some of them even looked interesting, but yours was one of the few that looked special! Your personality, your interests - we might get along really well. If you feel the same way, just write back, I think the two of us should give it a try! I also one important question to ask you and that is DO YOU HAVE A BIG HEART?
Regards,
sean
Yeah.... it's kinda sweet, isn't it? But - - I can say with at least 90% authority that it's a scam. It's not some sweet English college student sending it. My guess, it's either a pretender in an internet cafe in England or Nigeria, hoping I will be lonely and desperate enough to start the correspondence . . . we'll talk, laugh, and maybe he'll say within a month of daily notes and pokes that he loves me and would LOVE to come to the states to see me. Or that he has a little situation with the Home Office and needs money. . . for a visa. Or a sick relative back in the country parts of Britain. Or he is taking a semester abroad in Lagos. And then he'll take my trust and turn it into cash. . .and when he's taken all he could... he vanishes, leaving me with a broken heart and empty wallet.
419/Romance Scammers are starting to appear on Facebook. I don't think this will work for them as well as it would on other fora. But still, be vigilant with the PM's you receive, especially from those not on your contact lists. If a name sounds odd, (i.e, not consistent with the syntax of the language they claim to speak), or a PM sounds forumlaic (don't hesitate to run it through google, which is what I did), like they're in love with you already, don't respond. Delete them. If you want to run counter game on them, look to more experienced scam baiters to do this, especially if this is your first time. Remember, wise as a serpent, gentle as a dove.
*Taylor*