If you're going to pass something along, let it be this!
Interesting Note from Snopes.com
Just a word to the wise. E-mail petitions are NOT acceptable to Congress or any other municipality. To be acceptable, petitions must have a signed signature and full address. Same with 'prayer chains' -- be wary.
Almost all e-mails 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 this type of e-mail is, is to get names and 'cookie' tracking info for telemarketers and spammers to validate active e-mail accounts for their own purposes.
Any time you see an e-mail that says forward this on to '10' of your friends, sign this petition, or you'll get good luck, or what ever, it has either an e-mail tracker program attached that tracks the cookies and e-mails of those folks you forward to, or the host sender is getting a copy. Each time it gets forwarded and then is able to get lists of 'active' e-mails to use in spam e-mails, or sell to others that do.
Please tell others about this and you will be providing a good service to your friends, and will be rewarded by not getting 30,000 spam e-mails in the future. (If you have been sending out the above kinds of email, now you know why you get so much spam!)
Check it out: http://www.snopes.com/inboxer/petition/internet.htm
Note from Linda: I knew I hated "chain email" for a good reason!
2 Comments:
Again Linda, Thanx for the info and all the time and effort you put in to your research.
You're welcome but the real thanks should go to my cousins.
While I was off work, I did a lot of family tree research and reconnected with about 15 relatives ONLINE! So, in addition to all the tidbits from the various classmates - my cousins are pitching in!
I try to stay away from anything religious and political because I have some very strong views and may chase off some classmates! Ha ha.
Keep posting!
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