Not so subtle SPAM with great signature

I just received SPAM asking me to sign up for someone’s idea of an investment account.

Their instructions for removal from the e-mail list said to e-mail “biznessman@consultant.com” with “remove” in the subject line. The guy’s person signature file was appended to the SPAM. It reads:


It would not, however, be safe to assume that a constant flow of field-
collected input ordinates is not quite equivalent to the total system
rationale. Analogously, the earlier discussion of deviance cannot be
arbitrary in the preliminary qualification limit. Conversely, an important
property of these three types of EC is, apparently, determined by our
hedonic Folklife perspective over a given time period. In theory, most of
the methodological work in modern linguistics is holistically compounded,
in the context of a descriptive fact. Presumably, a primary
interrelationship of system and/or subsystem logistics delimits the greater
fight-worthiness concept.


Not a bad sig, but it hardly makes me want to hand them any money.

Has anyone else received anything with a good signature lately?

I found a way to avoid all spam entirely.
I got a free domaind name from DomainZero.
They also give you email accounts, one for each name you want, and will also pass on “all other”.

Now this is a little hard to follow, but what I did was get a free domain name (lets call it xxxyyyy.com).

When I need an email address to sign on to any website, I supply them with their own name @xxxyyy.com

For example, I sign on to Amazon.com with the email amazon@xxxyyy.com.

Mail from them goes into my “other” mailbox. If I find any spam there, it’s addressed to the site who gave out my email address. If I get spam addressed to barnsandnobel@xxxyyy.com, I just block that name and I never see anything from anyone they passed it to again.
And I also know who the skunks are who sell my email names.

that’s just all sorts of clever

cool idea barstow.