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In the greedy world of spam e-mail and electronic fraud,
nothing is sacred not even the death of Pope John Paul.
Spammers are using the popes passing to entice the
Roman Catholic faithful worldwide into a bogus moneymaking
scheme by luring them with an offer of free books about the
pontiff, a British-based computer security expert warned today.
The spam campaign was detected last Friday the day
John Paul was buried said Graham Cluley, a senior technology
consultant with Londons SophosLabs PLC.
Sadly, the spammers wasted no time at all, he
said.
Experts have not yet been able to trace the source of the
offer, which begins with unsolicited e-mails sent to people
offering a free collection of books about John Paul if they
click on a link included in the message. Honour His Legacy,
the book offer urges.
Curious consumers are then taken to a site which apologises
that the books are not available in their location, and are
automatically redirected to another site offering advice on
free moneymaking secrets, Cluley said.
That site makes no mention of the pope.
The campaign is similar to a February scheme that capitalised
on the huge interest in the latest Harry Potter novel, said
Cluley, whose company has labs worldwide that analyse spam
and help businesses stop it from streaming into their e-mail.
The use of the popes death as a hook to defraud unsuspecting
consumers is part of a trend linking spam to news of national
or international interest, prompting people to open e-mail
they ordinarily might delete.
Experts say there was a flurry of spam offers of bogus goods
and services tied to last years US presidential election
and pop star Janet Jacksons infamous wardrobe
malfunction at the 2004 Super Bowl halftime show.
Its incredible that these e-mails began on the
day of the popes funeral, Cluley said. But
the crowds on the streets of Rome suggested there was a market.
There are a lot of people who might want to honour the popes
memory by buying books about him, especially if they were
unable to make it to Rome.
The spammers can make so much money that theyve
got no morals at all. When they send a million e-mails, they
know some people will go for the deal, and they only need
a tiny percentage of people to do it, he said. Theyre
right down in the gutter. This was so tasteless.
It was unclear how many people might have been defrauded.
Last week in Virginia, 30-year-old Jeremy Jaynes was sentenced
to nine years in prison after being convicted in the US
first felony case against illegal spamming for bombarding
Internet users with junk e-mails.
Jaynes gained notoriety for peddling sham products, including
a site that masqueraded as a source of refunds for Federal
Express overnight mail customers.
Source: Sophos
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