If you are committing fraud, check your sig file.

I’ve gotten clueless attempts to extort money, but this one takes the cake:

It seems that the Mongolian University of Science and Technology is offering a class on theft, but I suspect this guy will fail Do check if you have your sig turned on before mass mailing. The name of your client also shouldn’t be taken from bits of a corporate directory.

Are these people getting supider, or is it just me?

Nice. You should forward it back to the school’s administrators.

Great, now the Mongolians are getting into the scam biz’ too. Where does it end?

I have to laugh at you, fuckwit

Thinking you’re so clever working out the origin of this email form the signature.

Anyone with a brain could work out the signature is forged. You know nothing about who sent this email.

HTH

Happy Poster, I think the staff is tired of your drunk posting and your recent behavior in general. You’ve been acting like a jerk. This is a formal warning for personal insults. If this continues your posting privileges will be reviewed.

That is a real law firm. Or at least, the link works and they do have email. So I asked if they have a Claire Callaway working there, and what’s up with this email?

I’ll let y’all know if they reply.

Not my fault you lack a sense of humour :rolleyes:

Your fault if you’re breaking the rules of the message board, though. So please quit doing that.

My guess: A Bot made its way onto a school computer and the school’s network attaches the signature automatically.

Could be, but most people I know have email set up to add sigs automatically, and I’ve never seen another example of this. I suppose it is possible that there is a correlation between having a sig and being not clueless enough to get your account hijacked.

It does ruin the effect, though.

I was thinking of the automatic signatures that get attached by Yahoo! Mail, iPhone, etc. As well as the disclaimer sigs attached by corporate ITs.

I hate to ruin the effect though :wink: