Anyone tried this

Are you really interested in maybe getting 20 bucks to forward massive amounts of spam to those of us who don't want it?

BUM ::)
 
I don't know about y'all, but i'm gonna set up about a half dozen email accounts on my domain, and then write a quick program to follow any links contained in emails received by those accounts.

:)

For almost no effort on my part, we'll see what happens. For some reason, this reminds me of the late 90s....

Edit: On second thought, maybe not. For some reason I doubt that a site this crappy could produce a viable business model, especially with grammatical gems such as "Do you want to earn money using internet?"
 
But I DO want to earn money using internet! Who doesn't? With a marketing pitch like that, I think they'll go far.
 
When I am deleting "incoming" (a little Viet Nam lingo
there) I am frequently amazed at the poor spelling and
grammar in these e-mail pitches. Guess I feel like
anyone who would bite on this crap is probably going
to get screwed eventually anyway.

JG
 
I am frequently amazed at the poor spelling and
grammar in these e-mail pitches.
I suspect most of it is intentional so as to avoid antispam filters. It's amazing how many ways one can find to misspell Viagra.

I agree about buying from such a source, but then I never understood shopping TV channels, and they've been going strong for 20 years, so apparently I wouldn't be a very savvy businessman.

I'm curious, John Galt: Do you intentionally break your lines at a certain line length, or is something else doing it? No biggie, and in fact shorter lines are supposedly easier to read. But most everyone else's lines fill the screen while yours seem to have hard carriage returns at the end. Now I'll be paying attention to see who else does it...seems like Chuck-Lyn does it...maybe it's a guest poster thing.
 
BMJ, I learned to type in BC (before computers) thus
auto wrap is not natural for me. I bet a lot of the
older generation instinctively does the same.

Cheers,

Charlie
 
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