Saturday, September 24, 2016

Delete This at Your Peril: One Man's Hilarious Exchanges with Internet Spammers by Bob Servant *Online Library »RTF

Delete This at Your Peril: One Man's Hilarious Exchanges with Internet Spammers


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Delete This at Your Peril: One Man's Hilarious Exchanges with Internet Spammers

Title:Delete This at Your Peril: One Man's Hilarious Exchanges with Internet Spammers
Author:Bob Servant
Rating:4.86 (518 Votes)
Asin:1602392757
Format Type:Hardcover
Number of Pages:176 Pages
Publish Date:2008-06-17
Genre:

"Genius! Highly entertaining and brilliantly deranged."—Maxim Spam is the plague of the electronic age, comprising 90% of all e-mails and illegally netting millions of dollars each year. Into this frustrating wave of directed marketing steps the brave figure of Bob Servant, a former window cleaner and cheeseburger magnate with a love of wine, women, and song—as well as a devious sense of fair play. In collusion with his "editor" Neil Forsyth, Bob gives spammers a taste of their own medicine. This wickedly funny and original book features the anarchic exchanges between Bob and the hapless spam merchants who unwittingly flood his inbox. As they offer him African fortunes, Russian brides, and get-rich-quick scams, he turns the tables by offering them some outlandish schemes of his own. Upping the ante with the skill of a seasoned pro, Bob demands legal asylum, shoulders to cry on, and gold lions that speak—and almost gets his way. The result is page after page of wacky a

Editorial : Author Bob Servant found a new way to deal with spam.Servant's communiques may inspire you to come up with your own creative responses. -- --Wired

You'll find yourself laughing out loud as the spammer scrambles to meet Servant's increasingly ludicrous demands.Getting even never felt so good. -- --Zink

The whole angle about her abuse as a child was really heart wrenching, but it really added to the storyline and explained why she behaved the way she did. Some of the answers written in to the chapter questions are right too.. Come on, a family where the parents drug all the children to control their senses. The book is informative without being to technical. For some, truth can't be handled well.

Those people will hate this book, but as H.L. In “Reality 4: All Generations – Including Seniors – Are Online”, she reveals an eye-opening statistic, “although eighteen- to forty-four-year-olds account for 53 percent of the total number of Internet users, the biggest increase…was within the seventy- to seventy-five-year-old age groupmore than half of those age sixty-four to sixty-nine…were online.” Statistics can be deceiving if read out of context, but sheer number such as these can end up being vital for a nonprofit’s succes

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