On Oct 21, 2011, at 10:16 AM, P. J. Alling wrote:

> I've just received a semi clever scam letter.  Not that the content is all 
> that clever but the method of delivering the content was clever.  The offer 
> itself is similar to the Nigerian scam with the twist that you're stealing 
> from dead South Africans.  Now I want to report this to some proper 
> authority, but all the ones I know of are asking for the text of the e-mail, 
> copied and pasted into a web form; which is where the clever part come in.  
> There is no text.  The offer is a Jpeg attachment that looks like text.  You 
> can't copy and paste that.  Short of running the image file through OCR 
> software I'm at a loss.  Anyone have any ideas?

Here's one solution:
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=7688138

Their video link is dead, so here's one that works
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=awtAKa22AVk


> 
> 
> -- 
> Don't lose heart!  They might want to cut it out, and they'll want to avoid a 
> lengthily search.
> 
> 
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--
Larry Colen [email protected] sent from i4est





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