That kind of random string of good English words in an e-mail (rather than on a web page) is usually an attempt to sneak past the spam filter.
Fred Holmes At 06:10 PM 9/16/2007, Alvin Auerbach wrote: >I googled "The "G" rate make-up stamp" (an old postage stamp) and came up with >several weird sites with weird names (example below) that have in them >hundreds of seemingly random words and phrases strung together, as: > >....files dailymotion airport in bulgaria the g rate make up stamp custom made >bottles in the philippines emergency... > >http://r.rqzgu.cn/ulkdxx.html > >Most of the sites have ".cn" in their URL. > >Does anyone have any idea of what they are doing and why? ************************************************************************ * ==> QUICK LIST-COMMAND REFERENCE - Put the following commands in <== * ==> the body of an email & send 'em to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <== * Join the list: SUBSCRIBE COMPUTERGUYS-L Your Name * Too much mail? Try Daily Digests command: SET COMPUTERGUYS-L DIGEST * Tired of the List? Unsubscribe command: SIGNOFF COMPUTERGUYS-L * New address? From OLD address send: CHANGE COMPUTERGUYS-L YourNewAddress * Need more help? Send mail to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ************************************************************************ * List archive at www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/ * RSS at www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/maillist.xml * Messages bearing the header "X-No-Archive: yes" will not be archived ************************************************************************
