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Here is an example of one I received;
walls at home - it can be displayed in a gallery or reproduced and not the designer itself. Architects and draftspeople now have study of simulation' or some like phrase doesn't get all the in a book.In this way the art is not dependant on the computer the unique advantage of being able to conjure up their changing v4

2007-07-24 05:14:54 · 6 answers · asked by Mrs Ckone 1 in Computers & Internet Security

6 answers

Because they originate from overseas, and the person creating them does not speak english too well.

2007-07-24 05:17:02 · answer #1 · answered by Mike 6 · 1 1

The spammer is trying to fool anti-spam systems into thinking that it is a legit e-mail. Many anti-spam systems look for word or language patterns that indicate the "spamminess" of the e-mail. By inserting carefully selected patterns of jumbled words and phrases the spammer hopes to fool the anti-spam system into thinking that the e-mail is not spam.

2007-07-24 05:19:12 · answer #2 · answered by Bostonian In MO 7 · 3 1

its designed to get past the filters in your e-mail... they scan for a certain phrase or word so by changing the sentence or a couple of letters, spammers are trying to fool your anti-spam filters...

2007-07-24 05:20:21 · answer #3 · answered by EBA_Devil 3 · 3 0

Who knows. I guess this shows that people who send spam emails are either not well spoken (written in this case), or don't speek English as a first lanauge.

2007-07-24 05:17:58 · answer #4 · answered by TOQ 2 · 0 1

yeah its weird. They always put them at the very end. I think they are just trying to be weird.

2007-07-24 05:17:46 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

it gets past the automatic filters that way, that is why they are typed so strange.

2007-07-24 05:17:48 · answer #6 · answered by SUPER BOB BARKER 3 · 4 0

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