Virus Hoaxes
Not that all of the commotion about
computer viruses is not complicating enough but when hoaxes get
thrown into the mix it just raises the confusion level even
higher.
Virus hoaxes are aggravating, time consuming, and can be
costly as well.
You are being fed a variety of information mixed with
misinformation and are clueless as to what to believe. It
is quite common to address every threat with a degree of
certainty.
Hoaxes and chain letters serve the purpose of multiplying
and maintaining a continuous growth pattern. The purpose is
then served by suggesting that you send them to everyone that
you know. Preying on the sympathy of the reader, the hoax email
will state something along the lines of stating that some child
is terminally ill and you need to forward this to everyone in
your address book for prayer or it may state that you will seek
true love within 24 hours if you do. There are many faces to
hoax emails.
Many hoax emails warn of computer viruses that never existed
and advise readers of ways to rid the computer virus from their
computer that could jeopardize the well being of an otherwise
healthy computer. In addition, these hoax emails also fill up
email boxes with unwanted mail and clogging our email servers.
The biggest risk of hoax emails is their ability to multiply in
great numbers as each person sends the email to other people
and so on. Within a short period of time there are a million
emails being processed by the mail servers and the cost of
handling all of these excess messages is paid for by the users.
If it was not paid for then the mail servers would eventually
crash.
Usually it is not very difficult to spot a hoax email and in
some way they all state the urgency of you forwarding the email
to everyone that you know. No message that contains any
credibility would ever instruct you to forward any piece of
mail to everyone that you know. It is ridiculous.
The two main variables that make a hoax email successful is
the way that the email is worded. It will sound technical and
believable People tend to believe emails more if the warnings
are full of technical jargon. These can often slip past the
most computer savvy people. Credibility by association is the
other variable meaning the prestige of whoever sent the warning
makes it look more real.
Keep in mind that hoax emails will never have a name or any
contact information. This makes it even harder to check if the
source is credible or not. It is highly recommended that you
never circulate these emails, just simply delete them. People
are extremely paranoid these days with all of the hoaxes and
virus threats that are circulating.
The people who send these hoaxes feed off of everyone's
paranoia and just keep inventing even more clever schemes. Just
remember that the subject line of the hoax email will be
enticing as it may say that someone has sent you an e-card,
which of course might peak your curiosity.
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