How to spot an Email Hoax - Guide to Recognizing Hoaxes

Spotting the latest email hoaxes may be easier than you think!

There are thousands of email hoaxes moving around the Internet at any given
time. Some may be the latest email hoaxes around. Others may be mutated
versions of hoax messages that have travelled the Internet for years. These
email hoaxes cover a range of subject matter, including:

   - Supposedly free giveaways in exchange for forwarding emails.
   - Bogus virus alerts.
   - False appeals to help sick children.
   - Pointless petitions that lead nowhere and accomplish nothing.
   - Dire, and completely fictional, warnings about products, companies,
   government policies or coming events.

The good news is that, with a little bit of foreknowledge, email hoaxes are
easy to detect. Hidden within the colourful prose of your average email hoax
often lurk telling indicators of the email's veracity.

Probably the most obvious of these indicators is a line such as "Send this
email to everyone in your address book". Hoax writers want their material to
spread as far and as fast as possible, so almost every hoax email will in
some way exhort you to send it to other people. Some email hoaxes take a
more targeted approach and suggest that you send the email to a specified
number of people in order to collect a prize or realize a benefit.

Another indicator is that hoaxes tend not to provide checkable references to
back up their spurious claims. Genuine competitions, promotions, giveaways
or charity drives will usually provide a link to a company website or
publication. Real virus warnings are likely to include a link to a reputable
virus information website. Emails containing Government or company policy
information are likely to include references to checkable sources such as
news articles, websites or other publications.

A third indicator is often the actual language used. Email hoax writers have
a tendency to use an emotive, "over-the-top" style of writing peppered with
words and phrases such as "Urgent", "Danger", "worst ever virus!!", "sign
now before it's too late" and so on, often rendered in ALL CAPITAL LETTERS
for added emphasis. Paragraphs dripping with pathos speak of dying children;
others "shout" with almost rabid excitement about free air travel or mobile
phones. As well, some email hoaxes try to add credibility by using highly
technical language.

Before forwarding an email, ask yourself these questions:

   1. Does the email ask you to send it to a lot of other people?
   2. Does the email fail to provide confirmation sources?
   3. Is the language used overly emotive or highly technical?

A "yes" answer to one or more of the above questions, should start some
alarm bells ringing. These indicators do not offer conclusive evidence that
the email is a hoax but they are certainly enough to warrant further
investigation before you hit the "Forward" Button.

Reply via email to