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The hoax stops here. (Tech News).


The scenario is all too familiar: A friend forwards a letter from a friend of a friend. The message begins, "This is not a hoax Hoax
Balloon Hoax, The

news story in 1844, reporting the transatlantic crossing of a balloon with eight passengers. [Am. Lit.: The Balloon Hoax in Poe]

Piltdown man

missing link turned out to be orangutan. [Br. Hist.
!" then tells a heart-rending tale of a dying child who needs you to keep his name circulating around the Internet, or warns you about the "Goodtimes" virus, bananas infected with flesh-eating bacteria flesh-eating bacteria A variant of Streptococcus group A, which causes toxic shock-like syndrome. See Toxic shock-like syndrome. , or pending government legislation--and it's all fiction. So are the promises that large corporations will pay you, or donate money to charity, for each person to whom you forward an e-mail.

E-mail hoaxes are tempting to believe, especially when they come from someone you trust, who heard it from someone somewhere down the line with "authority." According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the Department of Energy's Computer Incident Advisory Capability See CIAC.  (CIAC (Computer Incident Advisory Capability) A group within the U.S. Department of Energy (DoE) that serves as the department's CERT and makes its bulletins and documents available to the public. For more information, visit www.ciac.org/ciac. ) HoaxBusters Website (http://hoaxbusters.ciac.org), there are more than 200 e-mail hoaxes currently in circulation and the topics are almost as diverse as their numbers. But what they have in common is that nearly all include a request, plea, promised reward, or demand to "forward this letter to everyone you know." One current hoaxer even claims that some useless gibberish in his e-mail is code that can track the letters he sends, and that he will kill anyone who doesn't forward them.

JUST HIT DELETE

A hoax may create unnecessary concern or anguish," says Jack Smith, information systems security officer for CIAC. The Website describes numerous types of hoaxes and helps recipients identify and dismiss worrisome e-mails as fiction. A table at the CIAC Website shows the propagation of one hoax e-mailed to 10 people, who in turn pass it on to 10 more people, and so on. It takes only six generations of the letter going to 10 people to multiply to 1 million e-mails (see "The Risk & Cost of Hoaxes," chart).

Your e-mail inbox might contain more ordinary spam E-mail that is not requested. Also known as "unsolicited commercial e-mail" (UCE), "unsolicited bulk e-mail" (UBE), "gray mail" and just plain "junk mail," the term is both a noun (the e-mail message) and a verb (to send it).  or scams than hoaxes, but sending on just one e-mail hoax has an extreme self-perpetuating effect on the Internet. Moreover, these hoaxes add to the burden on your company's e-mail server See mail server. , which can cost a company untold hours of downtime The time during which a computer is not functioning due to hardware, operating system or application program failure. . Additionally, employees who become alarmed or upset by what they read will stop working to forward the message and reply to responses. "Spread within a company, a hoax may cause a loss of [productivity] as workers discuss the hoax," says Smith. While analysts have not quantified the cost to businesses, the CIAC Website estimates that if everyone on the Internet received one hoax message and spent one minute reading and discarding it, the cost would be roughly $41.7 million.

Emma Agnew, vice president of Unique Staffing, a temporary staffing, HR consulting, and executive recruiting firm in Memphis, Tennessee For the ancient Egyptian capital, see .

Memphis is a city in the southwest corner of Tennessee, and the county seat of Shelby County. Memphis rises above the Mississippi River on the 4th Chickasaw Bluff just below the mouth of the Wolf River.
, says, "I don't respond to [hoaxes] at all. If I don't recognize the person [sending] the e-mail, I don't even open it. Occasionally, I will get forwarded mail from people I know, but I don't forward anything"

Joseph Stovall, owner of Joseph Stovall and Associates, an insurance, accounting, and financial consulting firm Noun 1. consulting firm - a firm of experts providing professional advice to an organization for a fee
consulting company

business firm, firm, house - the members of a business organization that owns or operates one or more establishments; "he worked for a
 in Memphis, avoids the problem with a strict policy: "I tell [employees] I don't want them to get personal e-mails." If a hoax should slip through, Stovall tells them, "Don't pass it on; ignore it. If you don't read it, you don't get involved with it."

The Risk & Cost of Hoaxes

By the sixth generation, there are a million e-mail messages being processed by our mail servers. The capacity to handle these messages must be paid for by the users or, if it is not paid for, the mail servers slow down to a crawl or crash. Note that this example only forwards the message to 10 people at each generation; people who forward real hoax messages often send them to many times that number.
             Number of
Generation   Messages
    1        10
    2        100
    3        1,000
    4        10,000
    5        100,000
    6        1,000,000

SOURCE: THE COMPUTER ADVISORY CAPABILITY HOAXBUSTERS WEBSITE
(HTTP://HOAXBUSTERS.CLAC.ORG)


Protect Your Company From E-Mail Hoaxes

Though some e-mail hoaxes might seem genuine, they nevertheless can cost your business real dollars in lost productivity. Make sure employees follow these tips and hints:

* Don't pass on a hoax or suspected hoax. If you are concerned, investigate the e-mail without passing on the letter.

* Real computer viruses are listed at antivirus sites such as Symantec (www.symantec.com).

* Congressional bills have numbers, which can be found at Thomas (http://thomas.loc.gov), and bills considered by your state legislature A state legislature may refer to a legislative branch or body of a political subdivision in a federal system.

The following legislatures exist in the following political subdivisions:
 are listed on your state's Web page or in public records.

* Rule changes at a government agency are usually posted at the agency's Website, as well as notices of hoaxes relating to relating to relate prepconcernant

relating to relate prepbezüglich +gen, mit Bezug auf +acc 
 them.

* See more hoaxes at TruthOrFiction.com (www.truthorfiction.com) and at Snopes.com (www.snopes.com).
COPYRIGHT 2003 Earl G. Graves Publishing Co., Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:e-mail hoaxes
Author:Rohan, Rebecca
Publication:Black Enterprise
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Aug 1, 2003
Words:790
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