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Mission Statement of Blacklisted Emails: To end Internet based scams and scam email, by listed scam

Mission Statement of Blacklisted Emails: To end Internet based scams and scam email, by listed scam
Blacklisted Emails Scam Data Base

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

David Taylor has sent you a message from csmlaw‏ From: admin@csmlaw.co.za on behalf of davidtaylor_a@yahoo.co.uk

David Taylor has sent you a message from csmlaw‏
From: admin@csmlaw.co.za on behalf of davidtaylor_a@yahoo.co.uk


csmlaw
David Taylor thought you would like to see the csmlaw web site.
Message from Sender:

Dear Friend


With regards of gratitude, I pray this email reaches you in good faith. I am contacting you due to a reliable business fact that will be mutual to we both due to the position I occupy formerly as the Internal Revenue Control Manager in a the Abbey Bank Affiliated Micro-finance office here in London, United Kingdom-UK.


I am David Taylor, A French Canadian by Nationality, and Ex-banker with this bank here in London for about several years now. Due to the present World Economy Meltdown, My Bank has been named and confirm among five other banks here in UK that in liquidate in the nears few months by the World Bank Annex Office here in London due to the Global economy crisis.


Hence today I have conclude with every thought than to divulge confidentially to you that there are series of funds{US$7.5 M} belonging to a Dead foreign contractor who work under the British government in construction of the carter bridge. This Man died February 2nd 2005, along the on Alaska airline. Hence since this man death I have been his personal accountant and this funds has been under my custody for years, I have sincerely keep confidential these funds information and made this funds VOID and Unclaimed in our last auditing for the past years. Only for the bank to prompt me later yesterday to present the beneficiary of these funds so they can release these funds to the beneficiary account because the Bank is confirm to liquidate in few months from now.


To this effect I am seeking your consent to present you as the beneficiary of this funds as I am in control here, I have also sink every back dated document backing these funds from my desk. I will want us both to share this generational blessing among our families together in the ratio of 35% for you, 65% for me because I will love
to invest some share of mine after we have share this funds because you being the receiving end of this funds I and my family will travel over to meet in your country after the transfer. I will wait to read from you in my private email: davidtaylor_a@yahoo.co.uk

Your anticipation will be appreciated by replying me your

Full name:........,
Residential Address:........,
Nationality:........,
Age:........,
Occupation:........, and Direct Telephone Numbers (Mobile & Home):........,

Thanks God bless you


David Taylor
davidtaylor_a@yahoo.co.uk
Welcome

CSM Attorneys is a dynamic, Johannesburg based law firm that provides specialised service in the fields of commercial law, road accident claims, administration of estates, debt assistance and litigation. We also provide a full range of other legal services.
Click here to read more on our site



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Scams in the News


Blacklisted Emails | Email Seal Explained

EMAIL SCAM SAFETY TIPS


Scam tips and understanding scam email.

1. Take caution when you open email attachments, if you don't know the sender, google search or internet search the sending email address first. You can also search for the title of the attachment, also key words found in the scam email like. Such as keywords like names of individuals, phone numbers, the scammers so called place of business, anything is valuable in a scam letter to help identify it


2. Respond to only email addresses you recognize. Contacts that you have used before, although infrequently can at times be hijacked, so take caution even if you know the sender

3. Never give out personal information. If asked for anything other than your name and email address, do not reply. This is a basic rule, if the ask for anything other than what you feel comfortable sharing, don't reply

4. Call before sending information, even if the email looks legit. The number should also be searched or googled before calling. Numbers with a +44 prefix are normally scam numbers. You can also have your service provider search the number as well.

5. Never give out bank account information or any form of identification numbers, Social Security Numbers, or Credit Card numbers. Don't fall for it, never give out a bank number or credit card number, unless your doing direct business with the bank itself, there should be no reason for anyone to ask you to place your numbers in any email

6. Western Union requests are typically fraudulent. A company should be able to use Credit Card services or PayPal Services. Never send money to anyone by wire for a purchase. Even money grams and bank cards are being used as bait, don't fall for these scams!

TIPS FROM THE FBI

Here are some tips you can use to avoid becoming a victim of cyber fraud or email scams:

Do not respond to unsolicited (spam) e-mail.

Do not click on links contained within an unsolicited e-mail.

Be cautious of e-mail claiming to contain pictures in attached files, as the files may contain viruses. Only open attachments from known senders. Virus scan the attachments if possible.

Avoid filling out forms contained in e-mail messages that ask for personal information.

Always compare the link in the e-mail to the link you are actually directed to and determine if they actually match and will lead you to a legitimate site.

Log on directly to the official website for the business identified in the e-mail, instead of "linking" to it from an unsolicited e-mail. If the e-mail appears to be from your bank, credit card issuer, or other company you deal with frequently, your statements or official correspondence from the business will provide the proper contact information.

Contact the actual business that supposedly sent the e-mail to verify if the e-mail is genuine.


To receive the latest information about cyber scams, please go to the FBI website and sign up for e-mail alerts by clicking on one of the red envelopes. If you have received a scam e-mail, please notify the IC3 by filing a complaint at www.IC3.gov.

For more information on e-scams, please visit the FBI's New E-Scams and Warnings webpage at http://www.fbi.gov/cyberinvest/escams.htm.






How to Start out Fresh with a New Email Address


If you are really fed up with the flood of scam emails entering your spam box or inbox, maybe it's time to start out new?
If you do, here is the best way to do it. No matter what service you use, the number one ways to avoid the scams and spam is this.

Never sign up for anything where you address is going to be posted openly on a website.

Never sign a online Guest Book. This is how I deliberately get scam emails, I can start a fresh account, sign one guest book and get 20 scam emails in a few hours.

Never post you email in a forum or digest.

Never post your email in a service website, such as Newsvine, The Slate, or any other blog/news service.

Never send your email to a unknown person or company.

Follow these few simple guidelines and you should avoid the massive spams and scam emails. The more you think PRIVACY the less they will find your email address. It's really that simple.




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