this post was submitted on 10 Mar 2025
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No Stupid Questions

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Like, it can't be a real person, right? Has anyone tried following the links? I'm curious how they're scamming people. It just seems like anyone getting the same message 5 times won't fall for being catfished, so I don't understand what their strategy is.

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[–] [email protected] -2 points 2 days ago (6 children)

I understood you the first time. My point is, it's nonsensical.

If you're sending emails to potential victims you want as many responses as you can get.

It's an absurdity to suggest that typing errors would intelligently select for people more likely to be scammed.

[–] [email protected] 4 points 2 days ago (5 children)

I’m not arguing about this. Especially not with a baby account. This is an opinion informed by expert opinion on the matter, and I work in tech. If you think it’s “nonsensical” that’s on you.

However, the reason why phishing emails have so many typos is simple—they’re intentional and are included by design. The scammer’s goal is to send phishing emails to a very gullible, innocent victim. If they have typos, they’re essentially weeding out recipients too smart to fall for the scam.

Source.

[–] [email protected] -3 points 1 day ago (4 children)

Oh boy. Sure ok you must know everything about security and spam and scammers because you "work in tech". Honestly, telling people that doesn't make you sound any more credible.

Did you honestly just google "scammer typos" so you could provide me with an expert source?

You're making a very simple assertion - that typos weed out potential victims who are gullible enough to fall for a nigerian prince scam with no typos, but not gullible enough to follow through to actually paying the scammer.

It's a preposterous claim with absolutely no evidence supporting it. Any idiot can see it doesn't withstand a moment's thought.

On the other hand, it's demonstrably true that typos can help to evade bayesian filters.

The actual situation, which both you and mr security blog guy have gravely misunderstood, is that including typos in order to evade filters improves response rates because it improves deliverability and does not discourage a significant number of victims.

Er go, the type of people who become victims are not likely to be discouraged by typos.

That's not the same as including typos in order to discourage people who are not good victims.

[–] Feyd 2 points 1 day ago

If their claim is so preposterous then why are they providing sources and you're not. Writing longer and longer walls of text and being more and more disrespectful isn't going to convince anyone. If you have evidence just provide it instead of insisting is exists.

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