Colext/Macondo
Cantina virtual de los COLombianos en el EXTerior
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Ojo, que apenas comienzan el "spam" en el correo electronico luego de la
tragedia en NY y Washington.
La siguiente informacion proviene de la pagina de http://www.zdnet.com
Tenaz, no?
                Nestor Raul

http://www.zdnet.com/zdfeeds/msncobrand/news/0%2C13622%2C5096957%2C-hud00025nshm3%2C00.html


Online crooks exploit WTC disaster

 By Jim Hu and Rachel Konrad 
Special to ZDNet News 
September 13, 2001 3:17 PM PT 
 
Grieving Americans are flooding the Internet for solace and solidarity
after Tuesday's terrorist attacks, but consumer advocates warn they
may also find scams and spam online. 
The Coalition Against Unsolicited Commercial Email (CAUCE) and the
SpamCon Foundation warned Wednesday that con artists are concocting
online fraud to profit from the gruesome attacks on the World Trade
Center towers and the Pentagon, which may have killed thousands of
people. 

The groups say that most online scams come in the form of unsolicited
e-mail, or spam, and postings in community forums soliciting donations
for victims and survivors of the attacks. A typical message claims to
be part of an "Express Relief Fund" or "Victims Survivor Fund."
Another widespread e-mail solicited donations for the Red Cross, but
the link led to a Web site unconnected with the popular, nonprofit
relief organization. 

The agencies cautioned would-be donors to verify the solicitor's
identity through another medium such as the telephone before donating
money through credit cards or sending checks. 

"Virtually no bona fide relief agencies request funds by sending
e-mail to people who are not already involved in that agency," CAUCE
and SpamCon warned in a joint statement. "Solicitations made in this
way may also violate laws in the United States and Europe." 

Another group, Internet Scambusters, warned that con artists were
setting up legitimate-looking Web sites for donations. The group
provided a list of reputable organizations that were taking
donations--including Redcross.org, Unitedway.org, Helping.org and a
site set up by online retailer Amazon.com--and urged people to ignore
requests from unfamiliar solicitors. 

Experts in new media and communications said that the proliferation of
frauds online is not surprising or new. Despite aggressive lobbying
from anti-spam and privacy advocates, no federal or state agency has
effectively eliminated or even reduced online frauds and spam. As the
Internet has become more popular in households around the world, it
has become a fertile breeding ground for quick-spreading pyramid
scammers and other con artists. 

Still, academics were shocked at the volume and immediacy of scams
resulting from the terrorist attacks; they said they expected the
severity of Tuesday's atrocities to quiet even the most hard-core
spammers and unethical solicitors--at least for a few days. 

"For these scams to be happening is really terrible," said Mohammed
el-Nawawy, professor of communications at the University of West
Florida in Pensacola. "It's taking advantage of the fact that, in
these circumstances, people are still in shock and still want to help
in any way they can. People are giving their blood--the most precious
thing in the world--and they're also giving money. The only bright
side is that people are so willing to help." 

Shameless self-promotion
Blatant fraud wasn't the only pitch waiting in in-boxes in the wake of
the attacks. Advocacy groups warned of numerous unsavory, unethical
and offensive uses of the Internet, including e-mails and Web sites
that attempted to spin the attacks into a marketing event--in some
cases within an hour of the World Trade Center collapse. 

CNET News.com readers forwarded copies of several distasteful e-mails,
including one that read, "No terrorists here! Join our porn site, turn
off the TV, quit watching the crap happening in the states, and join
our free site!" 

Several marketers, ostensibly representing life-insurance companies,
also tried to prey on Americans' fear and terror after the attacks.
One marketing company asked e-mail recipients to donate blood or money
and provided a link to the official Red Cross Web site, then touted a
70 percent discount on term life insurance. A CNET News.com reader
bashed the marketing pitch as "unbelievably crass." 

CAUCE Vice President John Mozena said he wasn't surprised by the
volume and urgency of spam since the attacks, but he was disgusted
nonetheless. Especially galling, he said, were e-mails selling
commemorative products relating to the disaster or attempting to drive
traffic to pornography sites. 

"I don't think that it's going too far to call this evil," Mozena
said. "Is this going to do any more damage than regular spam? No, it's
not. But does this have potential to grab some people whose defenses
are low and who desperately want to do anything to help? Yeah, it
does." 

Within hours of the attacks, for example, CNET News.com received
numerous e-mails purportedly from young girls seeking more information
about the tragedy. Many of the e-mail addresses, however, contained
lewd phrases, indicating that the senders were unlikely to be young
girls interested in information about terrorism.

As the severity of the worst terrorist attacks in U.S. history
unfolded, the Internet also became the haunt of misinformation, tall
tales and other "urban legend"-type stories. One widely circulated
e-mail linked to a photo that some said depicted the face of a
demonic-looking man in the smoke of the World Trade Center immediately
after a suicide bomber attacked. 

Although it's unclear how many of the terrorist attack-oriented
e-mails are true, history proves that it's foolish to believe Internet
gossip. 

Pierre Salinger, former Kennedy White House spokesman and ABC
correspondent, held a 1997 press conference to report new evidence
about the TWA Flight 800 crash. He said the Boeing 747, which crashed
in 1996 off the coast of Long Island, was downed by a missile,
possibly fired by the U.S. Navy. His investigation hinged on documents
that had been circulating online for weeks--and had been largely
discounted. Investigators later concluded that the plane exploded when
a spark touched off fuel-tank fumes, and Salinger was widely
discredited. 

Wanting to belong
Numerous e-mails relayed survivors' accounts, typically forwarded
through dozens of people; the average recipient did not personally
know the alleged eyewitness. It's unclear whether such e-mails were
fiction or real-life accounts from people who actually witnessed the
attacks in New York and Washington, D.C. 

To some extent, sociologists said, it doesn't matter whether survivor
tales were accurate depictions from eyewitnesses. More important is
that such stories have given onlookers around the world a sense of
connection to Tuesday's horror--a connection that may mobilize them
against the global threat of terrorism, or at least help them feel
somewhat encouraged that they're not suffering alone. 

"A lot of what's going on is that people are trying to reach out to
each other to share in some sense of community," said Barry Glassner,
a sociologist at the University of Southern California who specializes
in irrational fears and is the author of "Culture of Fear: Why
Americans Are Afraid of the Wrong Things." 

"All of us want to feel like we're a part of a larger community right
now, that we're somehow connected to what's going on," Glassner said.
"A lot of people are passing along to people stories that take the
form of 'my cousin's ex-boyfriend's sister saw such and such.' By
doing that, we connect ourselves into the events going on, instead of
feeling isolated and despairing." 

Despite the influx of spam, scams, misinformation and distortions,
more optimistic observers emphasize that the Internet has been a
convenient conduit for Americans to vent fears, frustrations and anger
to a virtual community. 

Martha Haun, associate professor at the School of Communications at
the University of Houston, said the Internet has been "instrumental"
in helping people express their emotions. She compared its role after
the terrorist attacks to the traditional role of the clergy in a
family death or community disaster. 

"We all need to tell our story, particularly if the story is traumatic
or dramatic, and it's important to have somebody willing to listen,"
Haun said. "Being able to go online, writing your experiences down,
and having others read them allows people in mourning to crystallize
what they feel and gives them an audience. It's been a wonderful,
cathartic thing for lots of people." 




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