Very good advice. And your are right, most all police/law enforcement are aware that various safety programs will tell people that if it is not apparent, to do that. I don't think it would bother anyone in that position, the only difference being an immediate safety situation. (gunfire, house on fire, and so forth)StephM wrote:Welcome back Wombat!!! :D:
As far as posting the kid's pictures, some people will post their children's pictures on one thread, then in other threads describe their lives, their kid's names, their mom's maiden name, etc.
One thing I did with my older kids was to tell them that if a cop ever tries to "take them to headquarters" or whatever, they are ONLY to get in a marked car with lights, paint, etc. I told them if the cop says he is undercover, ask him to call for a marked car. The sex crimes guys my sister knows from the ER told her that was a great idea and most cops would not be ticked off about it. :D:
Somewhere out there...
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Re: Somewhere out there...
:pirateflaARRRRRRR YA DOIN'?
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Re: Somewhere out there...
I get these all the time. Right click on the message. That should bring up all the IP info on the origination of the message. Forward the scam to your ISP and the originating ISP and paste the IP info into it. Use abuse@(ISP) for the address. The ISPs will shut down the account.vixen101485 wrote:Some good points Steph.
On that same note.....look what I got in an E-mail. Are ppl really that ill informed to fall for this. Especially since they obviously know how to use the internet.
take a look at 419eater.com for LOTS of examples of scams.

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vixen101485
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Re: Somewhere out there...
Can you explain that all again in English. LOL Who do I send it to, since I have cable internet? Do they all have the same abuse@addy.?hobie16 wrote:I get these all the time. Right click on the message. That should bring up all the IP info on the origination of the message. Forward the scam to your ISP and the originating ISP and paste the IP info into it. Use abuse@(ISP) for the address. The ISPs will shut down the account.
take a look at 419eater.com for LOTS of examples of scams.
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Re: Somewhere out there...
Speaking from the NSP abuse desk standpoint, don't forward us complaints unless it originates from us or advertises a website on us, we can't nuke user of other ISPs and we're not an abuse routing service, even for our customers. I recommend spamcop for that, http://www.spamcop.net.hobie16 wrote:I get these all the time. Right click on the message. That should bring up all the IP info on the origination of the message. Forward the scam to your ISP and the originating ISP and paste the IP info into it. Use abuse@(ISP) for the address. The ISPs will shut down the account.
take a look at 419eater.com for LOTS of examples of scams.
They will report everything (including phishing) to the appropriate ISP.
Yes, just send it to abuse@ISP, don't send it to every address you get from ARIN (there is this idiot who makes software that does this, it sucks). If anyone has any questions about this stuff, feel free to PM me :)
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Go to your internet providers home page, and a lot of times they will have step by step info on what to do if you are not sure. Like others have said they can at least block from the address, if nothing else.vixen101485 wrote:Can you explain that all again in English. LOL Who do I send it to, since I have cable internet? Do they all have the same abuse@addy.?
:pirateflaARRRRRRR YA DOIN'?
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Re: Somewhere out there...
Yes, the abuse alias is a RFC requirement, RFC's are the documents that dictate policy on the Internet, it's not a "YOU MUST FOLLOW THIS" type thing, but if you don't follow RFC, other networks tend to look down on you and don't want to do things like accept your packets.vixen101485 wrote:Can you explain that all again in English. LOL Who do I send it to, since I have cable internet? Do they all have the same abuse@addy.?
What email program do you use?
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Re: Somewhere out there...
vixen101485 wrote:Can you explain that all again in English. LOL Who do I send it to, since I have cable internet? Do they all have the same abuse@addy.?
Yes and yes. It doesn't matter what media (cable, telco, wireless) is used to deliver connectivity, they're all ISPs. Some ISPs will block sites that spam their network. Yahoo is very good as they let their users class messages as spam. This will automatically put spam classed mail into a spam folder. You can either look them over or trash everything.

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Re: Somewhere out there...
Yay, the Wombat is back with stories! Fun! :twisted:BRWombat wrote:Hey all -- I'm back from the World and the WD Suite. Upon returning home, Step (1) Bring in luggage (but not unpack); (2) Check email; (3) Get on SGT.com!!!! (1,720 messages while I was gone.What is wrong with you people??? :D :)
Highlights of the trip were meeting Zazu :zazu: , hanging out with Wallaby :wallaby: , and riding his safari truck!!!Give me time to settle in (and for the room to stop rocking -- curse you, rough seas!), and I'll start posting details, including links to my full trip report and plenty of SGT's.
(Fear not, no real names or photographs will be posted online.) (Although I thought briefly about posting the pics, but with, say, Brad Pitt's head pasted on their bodies.)
But for now, I'm tired. Nothing like getting back to your car after a long vacation only to find you have to change a flat before going home.
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[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC] Hugging a Beluga is swell!
Re: Somewhere out there...
My first thought would be, doesn't the IRS send a letter? :D: Actually, I think if you are due an additional refund, they just send it to you. They don't even bother telling you ahead of time.vixen101485 wrote: On that same note.....look what I got in an E-mail. Are ppl really that ill informed to fall for this. Especially since they obviously know how to use the internet.
I get all sorts of stuff. My AOL account will be cancelled because my billing information is not correct. Well I get it free with Time Warner, AOL does not have billing information for me.
My Wachovia account has some fraudulent activity. Really? Must be fraudulent, since I don't have one.
Since I get these so often, I assume they must be working for someone or they would not bother. It does make me wonder who thinks that their bank, thinking someone is fraudulently using their account, would send EMAIL??
I do use BofA and I get emails about them all the time. Now if the scammers were sending them to the email I USE for online banking and not my "junk" email address, maybe they would get somewhere. :D:
[font=Tahoma]Steph[/font]
My Blog:http://2p2p-2princes2princesses.blogspot.com/
Disclaimer: May induce sleep, read at your own risk! ;)
My Blog:http://2p2p-2princes2princesses.blogspot.com/Disclaimer: May induce sleep, read at your own risk! ;)
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The IRS has repeatedly put on their website that they ONLY deal with taxpayers by mail on anything like that. I guess people are just not up on scams. Someone MUST be falling for it, for them to keep doing it.StephM wrote:My first thought would be, doesn't the IRS send a letter? :D: Actually, I think if you are due an additional refund, they just send it to you. They don't even bother telling you ahead of time.
I get all sorts of stuff. My AOL account will be cancelled because my billing information is not correct. Well I get it free with Time Warner, AOL does not have billing information for me.
My Wachovia account has some fraudulent activity. Really? Must be fraudulent, since I don't have one.
Since I get these so often, I assume they must be working for someone or they would not bother. It does make me wonder who thinks that their bank, thinking someone is fraudulently using their account, would send EMAIL??
I do use BofA and I get emails about them all the time. Now if the scammers were sending them to the email I USE for online banking and not my "junk" email address, maybe they would get somewhere. :D:
:pirateflaARRRRRRR YA DOIN'?
Give me time to settle in (and for the room to stop rocking -- curse you, rough seas!), and I'll start posting details, including links to my full trip report and plenty of SGT's.
