seawasp: (A wise toad)
seawasp ([personal profile] seawasp) wrote2009-12-01 03:11 pm

Phishermen have no shame...

... Got a spam/Phish message purporting to be from the CDC and asking me to create a "personal vaccination profile" for use in controlling H1N1 spread.

I really wonder how anyone can fall for these things; it's asking for stuff that the Constitution would forbid the government from doing, and all you have to do is mouseover the link to see that it's not going to the CDC, but to some server in another country.

[identity profile] muirecan.livejournal.com 2009-12-02 05:57 am (UTC)(link)
This sounds like the test a store was talking into trying. They ran a hard times sale. Everything marked up 25%. According to the story very few people caught or commented on the fact that prices where marked up.
kengr: (Default)

[personal profile] kengr 2009-12-02 06:00 am (UTC)(link)
My experience is that while a lot of folks do the read it like a robot" bit, a lot do anything *but* read what is on the page. At the very least, you get folks changing the phrasing to the way they'd say it. But you also get folks who "re-interpret" it even more than that.

It's something that always puzzled me, as early as third grade (back in the early 60s). I'd wonder how they could *possibly* be reading "that" when it wasn't what was on the page.

And as I recall, there are studies that show that people, especially if they are "skimming" *don't* actually read the page. They look for key words and phrases. And mostly ignore the surrounding text.

kayshapero: (glass squid fascinating)

[personal profile] kayshapero 2009-12-02 06:51 am (UTC)(link)
Certainly the ones doing customer support tend to do that - it can be tricky avoiding inclusion of key words that send them blithely off in the wrong direction... Sometimes I think I'm talking to the old Eliza psychiatrist program...