Magic Diet Product Scams Invade Freecycle And Meetup Groups
Beware! Affiliate spammers have infiltrated innocent online groups, looking to take advantage of the people who haven't yet heard that "free" trials of magic diet foods are a scam.
I recently joined a Meetup.com group for local knitters because my actual friends stubbornly refuse to take up knitting. This afternoon, the following message came through:
Hey, I saw that we were in the same group. I just wanted to ask you to check out my diet blog and tell me what you think of it. It's my story of how I lost 40+ pounds after having 3 kids! My link is http://www.marciasweightloss.com if you have any questions feel free to message me back, Thanks!
Hey, funny how "Marcia" lives in San Diego when this group is based in New York. And how her blog looks like dozens of other acai scam blogs I've seen.
Edit: Meetup acknowledge and explained the problem this afternoon. Good for them!
Unfortunately, Meetup groups aren't the only venue for spam. Messages similar to this one have started appearing on Freecycle lists across the country:
SUBJECT: [OFFER] My Leftover Colon Cleanse Product SEALED - Downtown
I got the results i wanted from using this, and I have some
left over which I don't really need it anymore. (It's for
losing weight if you didn't know already)
Some moderators see what's up and let it through; others don't. You can guess how this works—anyone who e-mails asking for the free product gets a link to a site where they can get their very! own! free! trial! Similar scams are run with spammers purportedly giving away video game consoles, computers, and iPods. The poster claims that the item is gone, but if you just click here and fill out some offers, you can get your very own Dell laptop or Wii, for free!
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(Photo: George Arriola)
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Comments:
@2DaysTillTheState_GitEmSteveDave: It's time I let the readers of Consumerist in on my terrible secret: I'm allergic to cats.
@2DaysTillTheState_GitEmSteveDave: Kittens are very hard to make into things. They run around too much to be a good scarf, and when you try to put a bunch together to be a blanket they start smacking each other. Then the claws come out and your PJs are in tatters!
And don't get me started on casting off kittens...
@Skaperen: When I wrote a piece of software to determine where our glut of Spam was coming from (we were recieving 50,000 per day at a very small company. Roughly 500 per day per user) I found something very interesting. Roughly 90% of them were coming from the APNIC networks. Once I banned all of China from my servers, we plummited from 500 per user per day, to 50. Those were cleaned up by banning the offending IPs systematically (mostly LATNIC and RIPE networks) and within a month, we had absolutely NO Spam coming in. I haven't worked for that company for 2 years now, but they still use the filter system I put in place.
@Skaperen: I received one of the spam messages yesterday. Here is the email address mine came from: marcia5450356@mobilestar.info
@Javin: I did something similar at my last company, except our sources were Russia, Brazil, and China. It’s amazing what can be ignored when you don’t participate in international business.
As an organizer of Meetup.com Maryland Japanese + English Language Club, I saw this hit two of my sister Japanese meetups in DC. The problem was that both meetups were open to anyone (including Marcia) to join. My group requires a request to join which can help to keep at least some spammers out.
I've known that there is the potential for this to happen on Meetup.com and any other SNS for that matter.
@satoru: So wait, you're saying that diluting a ingredient 30x in water DOESN'T retain it's essence or energy therein?
@HoneybunsCandy_GitEmSteveDave: It's not diluted 30 times. It's diluted 1-to-10 or 1-to-100, and then THAT solution is diluted again to the same proportion, and then this process is repeated until it's been done thirty times. (The 1-to-10 dilution is a 30X: the 1-to-100 is a 30C.) When it's all over, the probability that there's even a single molecule of the original substance left is as close to zero as you'd care to calculate.
Since nearly all of the water on Earth has been around for billions of years and is constantly moving around, you'd figure that every possible substance has been repeatedly and infinitely diluted into it, and so by the principles of homeopathy a glass of water from your tap would cure all illnesses. Strangely, that doesn't seem to be the case.














Meetup has actually already resolved this problem and you can find the information here:
[www.facebook.com]