On this date 38 years ago, Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walked on the moon. It still boggles my mind that some people still believe thew moon landings did not happen.
Here’s a picture of Neil during the first lunar excursion. If you look at the visor, you’ll see a reflection of the photographer, who was Buzz Aldrin, of course.

I do remember watching the moon landings on my family’s Zenith black-and-white television. Last year I set up a Facebook group for people who watched one of the six Apollo landings on television when it happened. For the youngsters, there’s always the “When I was your age, Pluto was a planet” group. Maybe I should I start a “Skylab sucked” Facebook group, because Skylab really did suck.
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This article first appeared on my old blog at http://www.bloglines.com/blog/wsodeman?id=38
http://www.wired.com/news/technology/internet/0,71387-0.html
“In Nigeria, we are always amazed that anyone could be so stupid as to respond to such an offer.” - Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala
This article describes how a few Internet users have battled so-called “419” scammers.
These 419 scams are named after a Nigerian law that prohibits fraudulent financial transactions. While this is an old scam, it became associated with Nigeria in the early 1990s. Scammers mailed thousands of postal letters to addresses gleaned from paper membership directories. North America, Australia and Western Europe were frequent targets.
Typical 419 scams involve advance fee fraud, in which the scammer asks the recipient to receive or launder a large sum of money. The scammer often portrays themself as an innocent victim stranded in another country, and promises the recipient a percentage of the funds in return for assistance.
The 419 scam is a risky venture, but it only takes one or two paying victims to make this a profitable endeavor for a scammer. As the scam progresses, the scammer asks the victim to send money in advance, as a token of good faith. The scammer may send photographs, forged documents and other materials in an attempt to gain the vitim’s cooperation.
Most victims lose all of their money. An average victim loses around US$20,000, and estimates have placed losses at US$1.5 billion annually. (http://www.419eater.com/html/ethics.htm)
Victims find there is no easy way to pursue the matter across international borders. In rare instances, victims have travelled abroad to meet the scammer, sometimes with disastrous results.
As Internet use became more popular, scammers around the world shifted their efforts to e-mail. Internet e-mail, in its basic implementation, lacks systems to verify the identities of senders and recipients. An alarming number of Internet users assume that the “from:” address included in an e-mail message is authentic, despite the content of the message.
These 419 scams have become a significant source of “spam” or unsolicited commercial e-mail (UCE). While most server-based filtering systems can detect 419 messages, scammers find new ways to get their e-mails delivered.
The people described in this article feign interest in a scammer’s proposition of quick wealth. The assumption is that the scammers will have less time to find new victims. Users sometimes post their correspondence with the scammers, including names, pictures and other information, in an attempt to shame the scammers and warn unsuspecting victims.
Does the good intent of the 419 “baiters” justify their activities? From the perspective of the scammers, the baiters are engaging in fraud. One might also question the cultural and moral implications of baiting.
See Chapter 13 for a good discussion of ethics in IT, and chapter 14 for an examination of global issues.
These web sites have additional information on advance fee fraud. Snopes.com is an excellent site that debunks urban legends and hoaxes. In the United States, the Secret Service maintains a page about these scams. The third link is a cache of the Secret Service site.
http://www.snopes.com/inboxer/scams/nigeria.htm
http://www.secretservice.gov/alert419.htm
http://cc.msnscache.com/cache.aspx?q=3869416205478&lang=en-US
The other three sites feature the work of baiters. If you are easily offended, please avoid these sites.
http://www.aa419.org
http://www.419eater.com
http://www.419baiter.com
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Tech: Wired 12.07: Copy This Article & Win Quick Cash!“In fact, successful hoaxes have always preyed on our tendency to imagine the future through the lens of our own hopes and worries. A celebrated 19th-century prank convinced millions that Thomas Edison had invented a machine capable of converting soil into cereal. A “top secret” report that became a best-seller in 1967 concluded that an end to war “would almost certainly not be in the best interest of stable society.” Publication of the deadpan parody led Lyndon Johnson to cable every US embassy, insisting the report didn’t reflect foreign policy.”
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World: The New York Times > Technology > Circuits > Turning the Tables on E-Mail Swindlers: “Now, however, an ad hoc militia of self-styled counterscammers on several continents is taking the fight directly to the thieves. Aiming to outwit the swindlers, they invent elaborate and often outrageous identities (Venus de Milo, Lord Vader) under which they engage the con men, trying to humiliate them and, more important, waste the grifters’ time and resources.”
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