So I have to wonder why it isn’t more common, and why spam emails and spam callers are still widely used when it clearly has greater exposure risk.
Is it that the punishment for spam is more relaxed than the punishment for targeted extortion? Or maybe targeted extortion would reveal more about the criminal? Perhaps spam emails, while highly exposed, do offer some level of anonymity that is greater than extortion. Or perhaps the thieves prefer to live stable lives and extorting people in a specific area would make them a greater target.
Just trying to figure out why spam emails is still a thing.
It has been running in this form with only the most minor of changes to the text for years. There have been times when emails I monitor have gotten 10+ of this message in a single day.
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Entirely separate comment: this type of broadcast channel is used in the newsgroup alt.anonymous.messages, though in there, the presence of a message is obvious.
But it's hard for me to imagine. What's the Venn diagram of overlap between people who a) would think this is real, b) would be able to figure out how to pay the scammer, and c) care enough about this sort of thing being exposed that they'd be willing to do so?
I also think, in this day and age, there are better things to accuse people of to get them to pay out. But then I am probably not in the target demo for the scam.
There are plenty of places where scam cultures exist, where spam email formats (they used to be called modalities) are passed around between participants, many of which are newbies trying to score big, often still minors. They may have seen or heard of one or two people around them hitting big with a scam and that's all the motivation they need to send out a hundred more messages. Spammers are not always some super-smart entity, they can be clueless teens cargo-culting their way into your inbox too.
How do you know they don’t make a new address for each message or maybe for every x messages?
genewitch•3d ago
Cypher•3d ago