Welcome to Gaia! :: View User's Journal | Gaia Journals

 
 

View User's Journal

Life is "A Bowl of Oranges"
My life here in Gaia said mostly in pics that I take while in Towns with my friends. Enjoy! Comments are always welcome!
Definition of Chainletter/ Chainmail
Chain Letter


1.0 Definition

Chain letters are malicious letters sent in a chain from users to users. The contents of the chain letters could be of a threat or sympathy. Chain letter is considered as a big problem, as it wastes users' time and network space/disk. Chain letters always give promising good luck to those who continue the chain. Most of the file is headers from forwarded messages.


2.0 How To Detect A Chain Letter

Chain letters all have a similar element such as follows:

1.

A Hook

A hook is to catch your interest and get you to read the rest of the letter. Hooks used to be "Make Money Fast" or "Get Rich" or similar statements related to making money for little or no work. Electronic chain letters also use the "free money" type of hooks, but have added hooks like "Danger!" and "Virus Alert" or "A Little Girl Is Dying". These tie into our fear for the survival of our computers or into our sympathy for some poor unfortunate person.
2.

A Threat

A threat warns you about the terrible things that will happen if you do not maintain the chain. However, others play on greed or sympathy to get you to pass the letter on. The threat often contains official or technical sounding language to get you to believe it is real.
3.

A Request

A traditional request is usually in the form of asking you to mail a dollar to the top ten names on the letter and then pass it on. The electronic request simply admonishes you to "Distribute this letter to as many people as possible." They never mention clogging the Internet or the fact that the message is a fake, they only want you to pass it on to others.

Chain letters usually do not have the name and contact information of the original sender so it is impossible to check on its authenticity. Legitimate warnings and solicitations will always have complete contact information from the person sending the message and will often be signed with a cryptographic signature, such as PGP to assure its authenticity.


3.0 Examples of Chain Letters

Example 1

You have been sent a blessing. Those who have followed the instructions on this letter have received good fortune, as you will. The rewards of this letter supercede the promises of all other letters you may have received.

This is the final chain-letter you will ever send. It's instructions are simple, to receive the fortune that has graced those who have received this before you follow these steps.

Example 2

Make nine unaltered copies of this note, and send each copy to a friend or stranger within nine days of receiving this. This completed, you will have received not only luck and positive karma, but you have been PERMANENTLY released from the obligation to send another chain -letter.

Example 3

Never heed another chain-letter. By sending this letter you have already incurred the fortune promised by all future letters you will receive.

Thank you for reading this and I hope you learned from it. 3nodding






User Comments: [1] [add]
o~VanillaKitty~o
Community Member
avatar
commentCommented on: Thu Sep 14, 2006 @ 04:51pm
Chainmail does suck domokun


User Comments: [1] [add]
 
 
Manage Your Items
Other Stuff
Get GCash
Offers
Get Items
More Items
Where Everyone Hangs Out
Other Community Areas
Virtual Spaces
Fun Stuff
Gaia's Games
Mini-Games
Play with GCash
Play with Platinum