Complaint Review: dr. bello momodu, national nigerian petro - warri Nationwide
- dr. bello momodu, national nigerian petro Nationwide Nigeria
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- Category: Banks
dr. bello momodu, national nigerian Rip-off petro give bank account number keep transaction secret allegedly will receive 20% of 428 million states a number of times the transaction is perfectly legal warri nigeria
*Consumer Suggestion: One way to fight back against SPAM
*Consumer Suggestion: I'm feeling vindictive
I receive many scams of this sort. does any one know whwere they obtain our e-mail addresses?
Patricia
saugatuck, Michigan
U.S.A.
This report was posted on Ripoff Report on 01/18/2003 12:53 PM and is a permanent record located here: https://www.ripoffreport.com/reports/dr-bello-momodu-national-nigerian-petro/nationwide/dr-bello-momodu-national-nigerian-rip-off-petro-give-bank-account-number-keep-transactio-41955. The posting time indicated is Arizona local time. Arizona does not observe daylight savings so the post time may be Mountain or Pacific depending on the time of year. Ripoff Report has an exclusive license to this report. It may not be copied without the written permission of Ripoff Report. READ: Foreign websites steal our content
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#2 Consumer Suggestion
One way to fight back against SPAM
AUTHOR: Robin - (U.S.A.)
SUBMITTED: Friday, January 24, 2003
To all with a "junk email" problem: I, too, was getting loaded with spam; I solved the problem with a simple-to-use program called "MailWasher". This is available as a free download and I was so impressed that I sent the voluntary donation!
This program, which you start BEFORE your regular email program, loads your mail and allows you to view complete headers and the contents of the message. If it is something you do not want to see ever again, it allows you to delete the message AND bounce it back to the sender before it ever gets into your mail program. It does this in a way that makes the sender think that your email address is invalid, so you will not be bothered by that particular spammer again.
Of course, the lists circulate and someone else will eventually try again, but in my case a month of diligence was about all it took to almost eliminate this spam nonsense!
#1 Consumer Suggestion
I'm feeling vindictive
AUTHOR: David - (Canada)
SUBMITTED: Thursday, January 23, 2003
I seem to get these e-mails every day - on different addresses I have. They could be harvesting e-mails off the web (if your address is posted on the web anywhere) or just getting access to any of the e-mail lists out there.
When I'm feeling vindictive and have a few minutes to spare, I subscribe the scammer's return address to as many e-mail newsletters and e-mail marketing sites as I can find. (look in google under "sign up now + e-mail" and you'll find a bunch)
If they can fill my e-mail box up with their trash, at least I can return the favour!
Its not a solution to the problem... unless of course we all did it to them.
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