Artists Against 419 Takes On Scammers 244
419scammers writes "Hello,
The following site is an anti scammers 419 site (plus associated scams) which has started to receive a great deal of publicity in a number of countries national publications. Their fifth international flash mob has now started. Have a look at the monthly flash mob link. Enjoy." An anonymous reader adds "More than 50 identified websites of the Nigeria-Connection are being targeted and the first ones has been already disabled. It was a very bad idea to copy the website of an innocent lawfirm..."
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Joke's on who? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Joke's on who? (Score:5, Informative)
<img src="http://www.some-419-scam-site.ng/logo.jpg"&g
So maybe a 1 KB of HTML vs. usually 10 to 20 KB of images, and that's for each image. You could easily add a 1 pixel frame which loads up dozens of images from the scam sites.
Re:Joke's on who? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Joke's on who? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Joke's on who? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Joke's on who? (Score:2, Flamebait)
Pity their crap website design forces us to trawl through their ego to getto the juice.
Nice idea, pity you let your loud mounths and yahooing get in the way of users getting what they're after, instead of getting down to business.
Re:Joke's on who? (Score:5, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Heh, Nigeria scam.. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Heh, Nigeria scam.. (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Heh, Nigeria scam.. (Score:2)
Re:Heh, Nigeria scam.. (Score:2)
I've been around awhile.
Re:Heh, Nigeria scam.. (Score:2)
Re:Heh, Nigeria scam.. (Score:3, Funny)
Hint: The passwords are "ekpontu".
Re:Heh, Nigeria scam.. (Score:2)
Re:Heh, Nigeria scam.. (Score:2)
Re:Heh, Nigeria scam.. (Score:2)
Priceless! I'm gonna post that site at work
Visions of goats, indeed.
ROFL
SB
Re:Heh, Nigeria scam.. (Score:2)
Re:Heh, Nigeria scam.. (Score:2)
SB
Re:Heh, Nigeria scam.. (Score:2)
The main reason it was a bad idea (Score:4, Funny)
Oxymoron (Score:5, Funny)
- Shouldn't it be "An innocent until proven guilty law firm?"
Verification? (Score:5, Insightful)
This kind of mob mentality is a little unsettling. I guess it doesn't matter as far as slashdot is concerned though. They'd take down a bus full of nuns if they were a website.
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Verification? (Score:2)
See for yourself. (Score:5, Insightful)
Mechanical/Formatting - The sites are decent, (i.e., not foreign spam bad) but they have enough errors and inconsistencies that I think they aren't up to the caliber of an international financial organization. If they really have any international dealings, they can afford a decent marketing firm or department to do their web site.
Sitebuilders - Look for systematic naming, formatting, and telltale HTML tags. Again, I wouldn't trust a financial org that uses a sitebuilder.
Plagiarized Wording - Try Googling some of the complex wording. A number of them show up word for word on other sites.
Take for example, financialsecurities.org.uk [financials...ies.org.uk]. The wording "has a highly experienced team of professionals providing unbiased and highly qualified services exclusively to its clients in selected technology & health care industries which drive the high-tech revolution" appears only at this site. [viscardi.com] Notice also the >>high tech revolution<< punctuation that appears afterwards.
Now it's possible that Viscardi is plagiarizing financialsecurities.org.uk, but Viscardi leaves a phone number, so you can call them and ask about it.
Now sure, this isn't hard evidence, but the consistency of clues on so many sites tells me these people (the artists) have gone through some work to come up with such a reasonably self-consistent list.
Re:See for yourself. (Score:5, Informative)
What do they ask for buried in the middle of the form? Your current bank information. Together with the other info, they have everything they need to initiate a wire transfer.
Pretty clear from that alone that they are scammers. No real financial institution would ask for that on an application.
Re:See for yourself. (Score:2)
If it makes you feel any better, I bothered to find out.
Re:Verification? (Score:2, Insightful)
ALL kinds of mob mentalities are more than a little unsettling, they are frightening.
Re:Verification? (Score:3, Interesting)
For example, would you trust a "decades old" UK bank with a non-existant street address, only mobile numbers, the registrant in Nigeria and no listing in the official directories?
From what I know AA419 is checking every flashmob v
Re:Verification? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Verification? (Score:5, Funny)
What makes you think we wouldn't take down a bus full of nuns in meatspace as well?
Especially if the nuns on that bus use... Micro$oft Windows! DUN-DUN-Duuuun!
Cha-ching. Thanks, I'll be here all decade. Try the sarcasm and don't forget to tip your waiter!
Re:Verification? (Score:5, Informative)
They are scammers, not legitimate businesses. They steal text and images from other sites. As others have already mentioned, you can use Google to search for some parts of the text on their pages and you will usually find the real source of the content.
It is also interesting to check where the images are coming from. For example, take a look at one of these fake sites: "Trust Meridien". The home page contains a link to the so-called professionals who are supposed to run this fake company: http://www.trustmeridien.com/directors.htm [trustmeridien.com].
Take a look at the second picture. This woman is supposed to be called "Elizabeth Gideon". However, the name of the image file is: Kay_ivey1.gif [trustmeridien.com]. The name does not seem to match. Indeed, a little googling allowed me to find an identical copy of the image: Kay_ivey1.gif [kayivey.com]. That one is linked from the home page of http://www.kayivey.com/, who is the Alabama State Treasurer. The scammer did not even bother changing the name of the file!
I am sure that someone could find the source of the other images included in that page. Anyway, if you still had any doubt that the site is not a legitimate business, I suggest that you get in touch with Kay Ivey and ask her if she is really part of "Trust Meridien". Or maybe she has a twin sister?
Re:Verification? They don't pay interest. (Score:3, Insightful)
(Yeah, and the fact that they have the account numbers in the source of their web page should tell you something too, never minding the l
Re:Verification? (Score:5, Funny)
No. It's not. At least, most of us don't think so...
Finally... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Finally... (Score:3, Funny)
Bad Publicity (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Finally... (Score:5, Funny)
Slashdot: The flash mob web site nerds prefer.
For some good 419 baiting try.. (Score:5, Interesting)
The Funny Thing... (Score:5, Funny)
The new Microsoft Email Initiative has promised to do just that- Every time people use their mail client, clippy will pop up with questions like:
Will you:
a) Give money away to people you don't know.
b) Double click nude.pics.exe.vbs.exe.jpg.exe
c) Mail this pyramid scheme to 30 other people
d) None of the above
I'm sorry I haven't a clue. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:I'm sorry I haven't a clue. (Score:5, Informative)
A "419 Scam" is the attempt to defraud people of their money by claiming that they need to send money and/or account details in order to recieve a large ammount of funds. If any victim actually cooperates, they're told that they need to send more. Spam is commonly used because of the relatively low cost of sending massive e-mails, and the fact that the scammers net thousands of dollars from each fool that bites. The name comes from the chapter of Nigerian number in law that says this is illegal there, yet a majority of these scams come from there.
flash mobs
This is a concept that comes from people who send text messages to a mailing list of bunch of friends that says something cool is going on, so anybody free should come join them. In cities, this can cause 100s of people to show up on the "if you contact 10 friends, and they contact 10 friends..." principle. Singer Avril Lavigne is currently doing a tour of unadvertised events at shopping malls, which have attracted up to 6000 people that more or less depends on the first people to see the sign announcing the event telling their friends, and having those friends tell others. This group is encuraging a simple Slashdotting against 419ers, which is basically the same principle. More people showing up than expected causes problems...
Re:I'm sorry I haven't a clue. (Score:4, Interesting)
Should perhaps mention that wrt to flash mobs, Larry Niven AFAIK was conceptual inventor. Although his mobs were more ordinary communications, and relied on teleporation transportation, the concept really isn't that different from what's happening now.
I haven't seen any quotes from Mr. Niven about it (yet) but I do know that several people who know him are quite amused...
Cheers!
SB
Everyone loves messing with these scammers (Score:5, Interesting)
Natural selection (Score:3, Interesting)
Think of them as the internet's version of the lion, culling the weak and gullible thereby keeping the species healthy.
Re:Natural selection (Score:2)
Wait a second... aren't most of the 419ers finding their marks by sending spam? The response rate is a trace, but the payout is enough to make the crime profitable.
Disturbing (Score:2)
B: So you're saying robbing from the clueless and senile is better than actually selling a product?
Re:Disturbing (Score:2, Insightful)
A 419 scam is actually a crime of persuasion, so while they might start out as just spammers they usually escalate to targeting specific individuals, and this is no gray area as in spam, it's a crime, period.
B: I was actually trying to make a joke. But really, clueless and senil
Re:Natural selection (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, there can be substansive collateral damage, vis that lady who embezzled her company to finance her advance fee fraud, and another gentleman who collected money from his circle of friends and acquaintances on the pretext that it was to finance a large shipment of clothing items for his business.
These second tier victims aren't necessarily weak and gullible - nor are they all on the internet. They were often approached by someone they knew and trusted. These cases, if none other, are a reason for us to be vigilant, and do what we can to put the frighteners on people that would purvey such scams.
( Although personally I think the time would be better spent educating people instead of trying to slashdot some website which the proprietors will just take down and put up somewhere else... )
Slightly OT (Score:3, Funny)
Not only that, but it hurts spammers!
Why use a web page? (Score:3)
I'll be glad to do this.
We could call it SCAMI@HOME (Score:2, Funny)
SCAMI@HOME will constantly steal bandwidth from these unsuspecting scammers, now there's a good use for my CPU cycles.
Re:Why use a web page? (Score:2)
Re:Why use a web page? (Score:2)
Of course, to do it WELL requires lots of OPM (Other People's Machines). So post that URL here when you've got it set up.
Re:Why use a web page? (Score:4, Informative)
419? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:419? (Score:3, Informative)
Wikipedia Article [wikipedia.org]
419 learning from junk mailers (Score:2, Interesting)
It seems that they are taking a page from Publishers Clearing House and using a trivial amount of peronalization to get people to open the email. I wonder if the victims will actually check to see if such a relative exists, or allow greed to take over. It is like those ad that say 'the government owes you thou
They Have a Game on the Site (Score:4, Informative)
Thing is, you can speed them up, and they automatically go towards your cursor. Even in the background (try it with a trillian window). And it's more addictive than you'd think.
Make 419ers spam each other... (Score:5, Interesting)
Many 419 mugus suffer from their small and weak penises, don't have any major education and need lots of stock opportunities to put their money into. It's only gentle to help them by having their email addresses [docsnyder.de] fed into as many spammers' databases as possible.
Sounds like a job for wget (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Sounds like a job for wget (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Sounds like a job for wget (Score:2)
Re:Sounds like a job for wget (Score:3, Informative)
Let's do the same thing with other spammers (Score:2, Interesting)
I'll gladly visit that page while I'm waiting for Spamcop to process the reported spam
Do some real damage (link) (Score:5, Interesting)
make sure, you use the new version (Score:4, Informative)
Nice idea. "Community "ttacks" can work. (Score:5, Informative)
Organizing communities to attack hostiles is a good idea, and lately I've seen a lot of mails pretending to be from Citibank, apparently linking to citibank.com, but instead hiding the URL by using HTML, and sending the user to a different page instead.
These new phishing scams [bbc.co.uk] have been covered by the media, and basically it opens a popup with the address field hidden, and it uses HTML/JS to recreate a fake one, giving the impression that one is actually at citibank.com.
An example of a received spam [google.com], which claims to link to web.da-us.citibank.com, but really links to a page which opens a popup [strongerinfobase.us]. The address of the popup is:
http://www.strongerinfobase.us/scripts/sys.php [strongerinfobase.us]
This page gathers credit card info. Maybe if there was a site to gather these addresses, hundreds or thousands of people could cooperate and submit so much nonsense - either random crap or seemingly real, but fake, CC info. That way, the scammers would have to wade through thousands of fake entries.
Maybe someone could even write a script to spam the scammers into oblivion :)
Re:Nice idea. "Community "ttacks" can work. (Score:4, Interesting)
SETI@Home for anti-scammers? (Score:3, Interesting)
I've always wished that I could take down a scammer with help from the Slashdot crowd when I've seen an obvious scam, such as the one in my previous post. Now, maybe Slashdot can post a story every now and then about this site to remind
Re:Nice idea. "Community "ttacks" can work. (Score:2)
Re:Nice idea. "Community "ttacks" can work. (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, what a good idea. I'll just join my computer up to a botnet and let some probably unknown individual give me a list of targets to attack. Perhaps when they run out of 419's they could start bombing the sites of political campaigns they don't approve of, or auction websites or microsoft.com.
If you're going to punch someone, don't let someone else guide your fist. You might end up biting off more than you can chew, if you'll excuse my mixed metaphor.
Re:Nice idea. "Community "ttacks" can work. (Score:2)
The only worthwhile thing to come out of all this are the brilliant scamming of the scammers themselves [419eater.com] which is tremendously entertaining.
419eater does a great job profiling the scammers. Now what we need is a web site with pictures of the morons who fall for these scams.
... or as previously covered on slashdot (Score:5, Informative)
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=03/11/16/2
Re:... or as previously covered on slashdot (Score:2)
A moment of your time, please (Score:5, Funny)
In sincerest regards and utmost urgency,
Skevin
definitions.... (Score:5, Informative)
Flash Mob [everything2.com]
419 [everything2.com]
Heh (Score:3, Funny)
Who really is punished here? (Score:2, Insightful)
The 419'ers exploit stupid people. These efforts don't address either the stupidity of people or the illegal activities of the scammers. It seems more like a publicity stunt to call attention to the artists than a legitimate and effective effort to stop 419ers.
While I don't condone the activities of the 4
Re:Who really is punished here? (Score:5, Insightful)
So we are wasting their bandwidth, but I can decide to stop downloading their images at any time. So it is not a problem at all.
And what more important services does it affect?
And they spam all kinds of people, including smart ones who will never fall for their scams anyway. And spam is a major problem today. Yeah, except these American companies don't kill their victims, which has happened to 419 victims. So it's OK by you that they send spam? I don't like it, so I'll be happy to use some of my bandwidth to take their sites down. If they can't scam people because their sites keep being taken down, maybe they'll stop spamming me. And the money they make from scamming people will be used for what? Funding wars, for example? Drugs? Getting people tortured and killed?Sorry, I can't accept that.
scam the scammers (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.419eater.com/html/stev_ebe.htm
419? (Score:2, Funny)
On a side note, are the '420' people more susceptible to '419' scams?
Art (Score:5, Interesting)
So if you had a 500 by 500 image built up of 10 by 10 images it would be 2500 images loaded on every page load.
Talk about artistic slashdotting.
Today's flash mob - 3rd May 2004 (Score:3, Informative)
For cable users - Scammers Nightmare [mugus.com]
And here's an alternative - Lad Vampire [freewebs.com]
Come on, don't be shy, give them some good slashdotting - it's good fun for the whole family!
Right Click? (Score:4, Interesting)
It makes me wonder if they are DOSing more than just 419ers.
is that really effective? (Score:3, Interesting)
Looking at the hit counter on their web page, showing ~330K hits, I'd be suprised it this is in the slightest bit effective...
The quantity of traffic you generate simply isn't that great when you can get a $9.95 hosting deal that allows 500MBytes per month or more.
Bandwidth is cheap. Loading the same image multiple times is a waste of space unless you don't cache in your browser (and elsewhere). If you have access to your web server config (even on shared servers sometimes) you can easily configure so others can't do this by requiring the referrer to be your own site.
RG
But I like 419 scams - fantasy net-worth. (Score:2)
They are certainly a lot nicer than the usual crap that comes through and they only make up around 1% or so of spams.
If you view the 419'ers efforts as a freedom of speech then I still think that the artists against 419 scams are indulging in a bit of censorship. True i
Feed pages with false data (Score:4, Interesting)
Oh Neat (Score:4, Funny)
I found a fantastic online banking presence. It looked very professional!
What did strike me as odd though... was the annoying POP up ad that jumped out at me. I suppose they are just a bit of a progressive banking instititution and using that money to pass the savings on to the customer!
Really, if you are going to scam people at least give it some good effort.
It's just a bit of human nature (Score:3, Insightful)
I have to think that even the most rational and law-abiding among us have at least fantasized briefly about launching attacks of various sorts against spammers and spam gangs. Innumerable fiendishly clever ideas for how to accomplish this have been launched right here on Slashdot--usually to be rebutted by wiser and/or more technically savvy heads.
The lovely thing about 419-baiting is that they're low-hanging fruit. They're accessible. Unlike the spoofers and joe-jobbers, they leave themselves right out in the open. It's as if they've hung a digital KICK ME sign on their virtual butts.
Revenge is sweet.
Re:Why this (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Why this (Score:2)
Exactly! (Score:2)
Re:Why this (Score:2)
Re:Why this (Score:5, Informative)
It is automated. RTFA. The pages automatically reload, or you can download scripts.
Their site features just about every grammatical mistake one can make.
English is not every person's first language.
They also accused me of stealing their bandwidth by going to their page. That seems to be a strange accusation coming from a group that is going out to crash other people's sites.
No they didn't. In fact they encourage people to, "...bookmark this site and revist us as often as possible", and, "link to us from your web site!".
Why is this guy's post modded "Informative"? I suppose wrong information is still informative, but jeez, people!
Re:Why this (Score:2, Insightful)
a bunch of slow connections can do much more damage than a few faster connections.
Re:Why this (Score:2, Informative)
Wouldn't it be more effective to start a Denial of Service attack (DoS) against this 419 sites?
We here at artists against 419 don't recommend any illegal practices! Such an attack might be more effective, but its less art.
Also from their FAQ:
Aren't you fighting abuse with abuse?
It's art! Sometimes art hurts, but there are no civil casualities in this battle.
You're right about the grammatical mistakes, though. Maybe artists ar
Re:OK it's probably me but (Score:4, Insightful)
The idea is you're stealing bandwidth to cost them a lot of money and wipe their site off the internet.
Are you attacking a good guy or a bad guy? That's a good question. You don't know, do you? You could be attacking a bad guy but you're taking down a small business internet provider that got duped themselves and you just ran up their bill thousands of dollars putting them out of business. You could be attacking a bad guy but their site is running off zombied machines in a hospital so you just shut down their network and killed a few people. Someone could have compromised that site and changed the pictures to ones on humanitarian websites and you're hurting the good guy. I don't know, you don't know. Who does?
And that is why a DDoS is generally regarded as a bad thing by everyone no matter who it's against.