Private to the bot that advertises the Online Book Club…

Much as I appreciate receiving spam for products I would have found at least momentarily interesting if you hadn’t spammed me – because that’s extremely rare – was it really necessary to hit me with 20 at once?

Uncle Joel: Sorting through spam so you don’t have to since 2008.

About Joel

You shouldn't ask these questions of a paranoid recluse, you know.
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7 Responses to Private to the bot that advertises the Online Book Club…

  1. Ben says:

    Spammers (including the pond scum to dial me even though I’m on the national “do not call” list) are the lowest form of life. I would never do business with a spammer because, 1) it only encourages them, and 2) they have already shown me that they are slime balls.

    What’s sad is that if everybody refused to do business with spammers, they would be so rare that we wouldn’t even have a name for them. So spamming obviously pays.

  2. Kentucky says:

    If it didn’t pay, they wouldn’t do it.

    😉

  3. Joel says:

    Yeah, and I have never understood that. Most of the spam that lands in the gulag folder is undecipherable and I can’t imagine how it could ever convince anybody to click on anything, let alone send money. But it goes on and on for years, so it must be doing somebody some good. I do not get it.

  4. joe in reno says:

    The indecipherable random stuff is farming for valid email addresses. Selling validated lists is mucho dinero. If you open one of these your spam count tends to go thru the roof shortly thereafter.

  5. MJR says:

    I am sure that there is a special ring in hell for spammers. Once a week I have to check my spam trap and usually there are a few dozen. Then there are the phone spammers. The guys I hate are the ones who phone at supper time trying to sell duct cleaning. They have been getting away with it because the call centers they use are out of the country. I just found out that five companies that use out of country call centers were recently fined. I’m starting to think about ways to monkey wrench the telephone spammers. Maybe agree to have the service guy come out and rip him a new one in person… Maybe give the spammer the wrong address for a wild goose chase… hummm, something to think about.

  6. Kentucky says:

    The one I’m getting real tired of is the robo call informing me it’s a collection agency and advising me to call their number IMMEDIATELY.

    As if.

  7. Ben says:

    Kentucky: Assuming that’s your home phone, and you also have an Internet connection, one answer is OOMA. I fired AT&T a few years ago and switched to OOMA for a fraction of the cost. OOMA allows you to block dirtbags like that collection agency, hundreds of them if you wish, plus they have their own list of blocked numbers you can choose to subscribe to. So now he dirtbags still occasionally call, but they can only call me once!

    Caution: The problem with all of these Internet phone companies is that no van shows up in your driveway when you have trouble. You must be willing to sort your own troubles.

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