Australian (ASX) Stock Market Forum

Map the world according to spam

E-mail spam inflates value


Pink Sheets' signs rank risky stocks
August 3, 2007

BY SUSAN TOMPOR
DETROIT FREE PRESS

Skull and crossbones are a trendy fashion statement this fall for sneakers or scarfs. Not so for stocks.

Beginning this week, investors may spot the skull and crossbones sign as a warning posted next to some specific stocks on the Pink Sheets Web site, which lists over-the-counter securities. The message is: Don't buy these stocks, instead run for cover.

"These are complete pirates. They're the worst of the worst. They're just bad people," said Cromwell Coulson, chairman and chief executive officer of Pink Sheets LLC, a privately owned New York company that publishes price quotes for thinly traded stocks on the over-the-counter market.

E-mail spam inflates value

Some risky markets are getting far more risky, as stock manipulators use e-mail, faxes and other means to snag a few suckers.

The Securities and Exchange Commission noted that it's hard to pinpoint how much money investors are losing to spam e-mail and Web site fraud. But estimates range in the hundreds of millions of dollars.

The SEC has noted that some research has been done that connects some short-term jumps in stock prices for these thinly traded stocks to the dissemination of spam.

The scam can involve a pump-and-dump scheme. A stock manipulator buys some low-priced shares in a pretty much worthless stock. Then, the con artist floods e-mail baskets with hot tips about that same stock as a way to pump up the stock price. As a few gullible investors buy the stock, and the price goes up quickly.

The con artist then sells the shares at the inflated price -- and the everyday investors are left on the sidelines to watch the price of their stock tumble.

Stop at site before investing

Companies that do not provide adequate disclosure about the business now have a "stop" sign as a warning to investors at www.pinksheets.com.

And stocks that are the subject of spamming or promotional stock activity get the skull and crossbones.

Companies with limited financial information would receive a "yield."

Some names that will get the skull and crossbones include Global Developments Inc. -- ticker symbol GDVM.PK -- and Bell Buckle Holdings Inc. -- ticker symbol BLLB.PK. Spammers have touted both stocks.

Management of both companies say they are not involved in promoting their stocks by e-mail.

"It has become easier to tap investor greed if you are a manipulator," Coulson said.

So avoid all hot stock tips that you get via spam e-mail.

But if you're really tempted, do more research by going to www.pinksheets.com or the SEC Web site at www.sec.gov.

Some legitimate, distressed companies, including Delphi Corp., are listed on Pink Sheets. Pink Sheets also is offering a grouping -- the International OTCQX -- to highlight the highest quality international companies, such as Wal-Mart de Mexico.

In general, stocks on the Pink Sheets are speculative investments.

But you do not want to shop for any stock that has the skull and crossbones. Trendy or not.
 
A Surge in Spam

By Ben Worthen | WSJ | 8th August 2007

The amount of spam emails, which already accounts for close to 90% of all messages, has jumped 30% in the last 24 hours, according to the email security firm Sophos*. Not only could this slow down company computer networks, but it could end up costing individuals who fall for the scam the spam emails tout.

The rise is due to one particular campaign, a “pump and dump” scheme that promotes a particular stock that the spammers have bought cheap, which they then sell once other buyers have driven up the price. In this case, the spammers are touting the stock of Prime Time Group Inc., which went from 4 cents a share at the end of last week to 9 cents a share today.

The spam messages are getting through corporate spam filters because they come in as PDF files attached to emails. Companies are reluctant to block PDF files because so many legitimate business correspondences are sent as PDFs.

* www.sophos.com
 
Stocks And Drugs Most Common Spam Subjects
By Mendelson Tiu | Tuesday | 14/08/2007

BitDefender has reported that stocks and sex-related drugs are subjects that are commonly related to image and text spam for the first half of 2007. It has also reported that spammers tend to send emails to fewer recipients with small variations to try and avoid early detection.

Head of BitDefender's Antispam Lab, Vlad Valceanu said, "Among the trends we found were that spammers are e-mailing fewer targets at a time, while introducing small variations in every e-mail sent in hopes of avoiding timely detection. We expect to see more of this in the next half of the year, as well as an increased use of attachments and possibly even embedded flash."

New types of spam have emerged in 2007, most notably hosted-image spam, which instead of containing an image, provides a link to a website hosting the spam. Spam with attachments, such as a PDF file, is another type of spam that has become more apparent since the beginning of 2007.

Messages that focused on pump-and-dump penny stocks were the most prevalent of all spam messages, and image spam was the medium of choice for the senders of these spam messages, in the first half of the year.

The most common subjects of image spam since January 2007 according to BitDefender Labs included:

Stock 75%

Drugs (sex-related) 8.1%

Replica watches 5%

Mortgage 4%

Phishing 2%

pr0n 2 %

Diploma 1%

Drugs (weight-loss related) 0.9%

Travel 0.5%

Software 0.5%

Other topics 1%

BitDefender Labs also found that drug-related topics were the preferred choice of spammers. Spam messages focused on sexual enhancing and weight loss drugs accounted for a whopping 56.2% of all text spam, while spam messages focused on replica watches came in at the third place in both of BitDefender's image and text spam lists.


The most common subjects of text spam since January 2007 included:

Drugs (sex-related) 42.5%
Drugs (weight-loss related) 13.8%
Replica watches 9.1%
Mortgage 7.4%
Phishing 4.2%
Electronics 3.8%
Traveling 3.6%
Stock 3.6%
Software 2.5%
Diploma 2.1%
Grants 1.5%
Dating 0.5%
Other topics 5.4%

See: www.bitdefender.com.au
 
A sentence for a spammer

A COURT in New York is expected to sentence Adam Vitale, who pleaded guilty in June to breaking a federal law that prohibits spam mails. In 2005 he helped to send some 1.2m emails to subscribers of America Online (AOL). He had been caught boasting that he could bypass software used by AOL to block spam e-mails. He faces a possible 11 years in prison and a fine of $250,000.

Source: The Economist, September 9.
 
I've just taken out a contract with my ISP for the huge sum of $10 per annum to filter out all spam. We'll see how effective it is. I am entirely tired of receiving pornographic rubbish.
 
Hi all

I installed some extra anti-spyware and windows optimisation programs some months ago from http://mywebpages.comcast.net/SupportCD/OptimizeXP.html and have been happy with it blocking spyware and improving performance. I probably should check for updates I guess.

The only thing to get through is this email I recieved last thursday. I had received one similar last year. Is anyone else getting this and has anyone have any clues how to stop these?

I x out telephone and wed address

From Mr. Osmond Attah
TEL: +xxxxxxxxxxxxx

Greetings to you,

This letter must come to you as a big surprise, but I believe it is
only a day that people meet and become great friends/ business partners. I
am Osmond Attah, currently Head of Corporate Affairs Department with a
reputable bank here in Ghana. I write you this proposal in good faith,
believing that I can trust you with the information I am about to
reveal to you.

I have an urgent and very confidential business proposition for you. On
June 5th, 2000, a German business tycoon Mr. Andreas Schranner made a
(Fixed deposit) for 60 calendar months, valued at US$12,500,000.00
(Twelve Million Five hundred Thousand Dollars only) in my bank and I happen
to be his account officer before I was moved to my present position
recently. The maturity date for this deposit contract was last 3rd of
April 2005. Before this date, I have tried my possible best to locate a
Next of Kin to late Mr. Schranner, but all efforts proved abortive,
because all his family, including his Son In-Law and children died in the
plane crash of Concorde Air France Flight AF4590 which took place on 25th
July 2000, some months after he did the deposit in my bank. You can
read more story about the plane crash by visiting this website;
http://xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

With the recent change of government in my country and with their
efforts to support the United Nations in checkmating terrorism aid in Ghana.
By end of October this year, the Government will pass a new Financial
Control Law which will give the Government authority to interrogate
account owners of above $5 million Dollars to explain the source of the
funds, making sure it is not for terrorism support. If I do not move this
money out of the country immediately, by October the Government will
definitely confiscate the money, because my bank cannot provide the
account owner to explain the source of the money since he is late.

I decided to utilize this life time opportunity, instead of Government
confiscating the, but I cannot directly claim the money without the
help of a foreigner and that is why I am contacting you for an assistance.
As the Account Officer to late Mr. Schranner, coupled with my present
position and status in the bank, I have the power to influence the
release of the funds to any foreigner that comes up as the Next of Kin to
the account, with the correct information concerning the account, which
I shall give you. I am having the secret Code for the account, which
only the account owner or his Next of Kin can know. I shall supply all
necessary information we need for the claim and there is practically no
risk involved, the transaction will be executed under a legitimate
arrangement that will protect you from any breach of law, beside Ghana is
porous and anything goes.

If you accept to work with me, I want you to state how you wish us to
share the funds in percentage, so that both parties will be satisfied. I
shall explain to you in details how we shall handle the transaction
once I receive your response. Thanking you in advance and may God bless
you. Please, treat with utmost confidentiality. I shall send you copy of
the deposit slip issued to Mr. Schranner when the deposit was made for
your perusal. I wait your urgent response.

Regards,
Osmond Attah.
 
Whiskers,

This is the same old scam which has been coming out of Nigeria for years.
Not so long ago "60 Minutes" did a programme where they actually followed up instances where people had been silly enough to respond to this rubbish and had been fleeced for large amounts of money. The "60 Minutes" team ran down the scammers and went over there and confronted them. So perhaps if you contacted the producers they want to add your 'benefactor' to the list of their scammers?

Have a look on the ASIC website. I think they have a section on the various popular scams.

Otherwise just delete it. Don't consider replying and thus confirming your existence.
 
Thanks for that Julia. I'll send a copy to 60 Minutes as well.

The other one I got, a year or so ago, was worded differently, but same sting. I immediatly contacted the state police got referred to the fed police, not sure now where I ended up, but it was the place that deals with this sort of thing. But, they told me there was nothing much they could do about it because they came from overseas. Not sure, but maybe because we don't have police cooperation with some of those countries.
 
Investment scams on older people

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

US probe into scams on elderly revealed
By Jeremy Grant in Washington

September 10, 2007 | Financial Times

US regulators will on Monday present results of a year-long inquiry into investment scams that are fleecing retirees out of their life savings.

The Securities and Exchange Commission will report on the growing phenomenon of “free lunch” seminars that financial advisers offer to older people.

With the US on the cusp of a massive increase in population of retirees as the oldest of the “baby boom” generation reaches 60, there are fears their wealth is becoming a magnet for fraudsters.

The AARP, a non-profit group that advises over-50s, estimates that $16,000bn (£7,890bn) in financial assets are in households headed by someone aged 60 or more.

A study by the North American Securities Administrators Association showed investment fraud against senior citizens accounted for almost half of all complaints to state securities regulators.

The SEC will show that its inquiry of 110 financial seminars had found them to be sales promotions that were billed as educational.

Half the seminars, usually held at golf courses and hotels, involved “exaggerated or misleading” claims. One example: “How $100K can pay 1 Million Dollars to Your Heirs.” People were duped into writing cheques for investments that did not exist or that were unsuitable for conservative investors.

On Friday, the SEC and Hawaii securities commissioner filed actions against a Honolulu man. It is alleged Mark Teruya and his investment firm fraudulently induced senior citizens to sign forms that were used to sell their securities holdings without their knowledge. Mr Teruya, 35, is alleged to have received commissions of about $2m.
 
Stock spammers went to Germany
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

'Spamalot' drive deflects e-mail blitz
By Jeremy Grant | Financial Times
October 6, 2007

"Keep your eyes open, this one is going to take off," said an e-mail sent yesterday to millions of addresses in the US yesterday touting Fearless International Inc, a penny stock.

The e-mail was typical of the financial spam that has become the most common type of nuisance e-mail to clog inboxes worldwide after e-mails touting counterfeit designer products.

Frustration at the trend boiled over six months ago when the Securities and Exchange Commission, the US financial markets watchdog, launched an unprecedented anti-spam initiative called "Operation Spamalot".

Its staff had come up with an innovative way to fight the spammers: instead of trying to head off incoming e-mails using sophisticated technology, the SEC would ban trading in the penny stocks being promoted.

Over the past week the regulator has suspended trading in Alliance Transcription Services, Inc, Prime Petroleum Group, Inc, and T.W. Christian, Inc.

The scheme seems to have worked. The SEC said its "assault on stock market e-mail spam" had been credited for a "significant worldwide reduction in financial spam".

It cited research by Symantec, a company that specialises in computer software protection, saying that it had detected a 30 per cent fall in financial spam in the first six months of this year.

The research credited this mostly to an absence of "pump and dump" e-mails touting stocks.

But there is a catch. Shortly after the SEC's crackdown started, evidence shows, the financial spammers simply went offshore: to Germany.

Bradley Anstis, the vice-president of products at Marshal, an internet security firm, says: "We noticed a significant uptick in Germany."

He says this was the first time Marshal had seen a significant drop in financial spam in one country and a rise in another.

The development shows that the SEC's efforts to purge the US of nuisance financial spam may have the unintended consequence of compounding the problem elsewhere. "As soon as they plug one hole, they find another one. It's a constant cat and mouse game," says Mr Anstis.
 

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I used to receive 20 to 30 spam emails each day. and now I probably get one every second day or so since using "Spamfighter" it's free.

Don't know how it does it, but from what I'm told it was developed in collaberation with microsoft.

One click to block any spam emails that get thru does the trick, but the vast majority are stopped by the sofware itself.
 
Also worth noting, some of those "no name" brand ANTIspam programs, commonoly mask themselves as the Cure.... but install spyware/ads/backdoors or just sign you up to their subscription service, so best do your homework b4 installing anything...

SevenFX
 
How do political parties get your email address?

In my inbox this evening was an email from the Greens candidate.
I have never had any contact with the Greens.
 
Spam & Scam Ltd

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Scammed investors get cash back

By Jennifer Hill

London - More than 150 investors have clawed back one million pounds from a "boiler room" scam in a rare victory for swindled consumers.

Boiler room firms promote and sell shares to British investors that are overpriced, restricted for onward sale and have little or no realisable value.

The usual approach is a high-pressure pitch over the phone - the most probable reason for the name.

The Financial Services Authority (FSA) is unable to take direct action to shut down such firms because they are largely based outside the UK.

But in this case, 153 investors have been refunded about 90 percent of a total £1,25-million (about R20-million) after they were illegally sold shares by two unauthorised, overseas investment firms.

The FSA worked with Canadian regulators - the British Columbia Securities Commission and Ontario Securities Commission (OSC) - to freeze the funds.

Investors had sent the money to North American based-companies Rocky Mountain Gold Mining Corp and Rocky Mountain Gold Mining Inc.

Jonathan Phelan, head of the FSA's enforcement division, said: "This is a rare bit of good news for investors who have been persuaded to hand over money to boiler rooms, as usually the money disappears without a trace.

"Investors are reminded to just hang up the phone when contacted by boiler rooms as in most cases these investments do not have a happy ending."

Investors in the boiler rooms who have not yet been contacted by the FSA or OSC should call the FSA's consumer contact centre on 0845 6061234.

Source: Business Report on March 6, 2008.
 
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