I feel sorry for the poor innocent Canadian geese -- *Greg*

On 2 July 2015 at 14:54, Grant Maw <[email protected]> wrote:

> Guys
>
> Not really a .net specific post, but I thought I'd share anyway.
>
> I'm working on a database at the moment that is used to record heart rates
> and other biometric data in high intensity exercise scenarios.
>
> We're working with an offshore company, creating what is essentially a
> copy of part of their existing database, with modifications to suit our
> particular requirements. The guy at the other end said he would give me a
> database diagram together with a dump of the relevant data into Excel so
> that I could see how it all hangs together.
>
> First off, he tried to shoehorn the data from about 20 different SQL
> tables into a single spreadsheet. Not a workbook with multiple sheets, a
> single sheet.
>
> I could probably live with that, except he grabbed the wrong data before
> he sent it to me. Instead of heart rate and respiratory data, I got a set
> of tables that provided links to porn sites and sex videos, handbag sales,
> pharmaceuticals, products made from Canadian geese, hair loss tonics,
> gambling sites, horse racing, Viagra and Cialis, and a variety of other
> things.
>
> It was clearly a data set that is used as the basis for a spam sending
> application. Talk about busted!
>
> I should be pissed off with them for wasting my time, but I'm laughing too
> hard. Needless to say I'll not be taking anything they say seriously from
> now on!
>
> Cheers
>
> Grant
>
>
>

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