Come
Thursdays, and my email fills with unwanted spam. Last week I got a couple from
Norton Security sent from two different sites reminding me it’s time to
pay their annual subscription (I have never in my life used Norton). The
kosher version of this company functions in real life precisely as a
spam-buster. Their messages also say at the bottom that I ‘can unsubscribe’ by
clicking on something or other; thank you, most kind, I think not.
Microsoft also reaches out, again
twice, from two different and rather odd sounding addresses, neither of which
appear on their proper webpage – no doubt an oversight on their part. Again, I
block them (‘submit as Spam’), but they will return (probably next
Thursday – I wonder, possibly this day has an extra significance in Albania?).
Then
there was a special deal on a memory-foam pillow. I’m retired. I already have a
fucking pillow.
I
got a too-good-to-refuse offer on my ‘auto-insurance’, an Omaha Steak gourmet
sampler box (no charge), a free mystery parcel from the American post office
(!), a cure for Alzheimer’s from Bill Gates and a message which assures me that
‘my wife says I’ve never had sex like this’.
Again,
I can unsubscribe, but well, maybe I should go and get married first.
This
is all designed to catch out the unwary.
What
I do, what we all do, is mark it as ‘Spam’ and then wait for the next one.
Whatever
happened to those exiled Nigerian princes who would kindly offer you half of their
five million shillings if they could just borrow your bank account for a few
days?
Also
on Thursday last week – what a day it was! – a message arrived that very evening
from my caja to tell me that it was going to pay on my behalf to another
bank which I have never dealt with the unlikely sum of 1,982.44€ within the
hour and could I ring this number if I wasn’t in agreement… No, I could not.
The
next day, the lady at the caja told me that it hadn’t come from them. There’s
a surprise.
I
got several bothersome phone calls on Thursday as well. No one rings any more –
they send you a WhatsApp instead. Now these calls, and I’ve blocked
loads of them, come from Madrid or Valladolid or Myanmar and they want to sell
me something. ‘Hola’, they say, ‘buenas tardes. Mi nombre es-’,
but by then I’ve already hung up the phone.
All
this, and I’m on the Lista Robinson (created precisely to stop these
calls) and besides, the Government has just made those call-centres illegal.
Maybe
the word hasn’t got through yet.
These
days, one is always doing something more rewarding than waiting for a phone
call. In my case it was driving (try and get the phone out of your trouser
pocket while wearing a seat-belt) or having a siesta and dreaming about how I
was going to surprise my future wife.
A
useful site called Maldita keeps an eye out on scams. I was reading
about how somebody sends you a
message on WhatsApp about an earthquake and how you should link to
such and such a page which, says the item, will clear out your phone in under
ten seconds!
On Facebook last… yes
dammit, it was also on Thursday… a series of adverts appeared with the Spanish
king trying to sell me a get-rich-quick scheme. Then one from the head of the
Banco de Santander, then another with both of them. I wrote to the Facebook
poohbahs and said it was a scam and they thanked me for my nice letter, but
that the adverts were fine and dandy. Old Mark Chuckleburg must need the money.
I remember last summer there
was another Fb scam, where you and nine others received a message about
a car-crash and an ‘Oh The Horror! Click here for details’.
I checked with Google AI
and got: ‘Spam bypasses filters because spammers constantly evolve
tactics—using new domains, rotating IP addresses, and embedding text within
images to evade detection. Filters cannot be perfectly restrictive without
blocking legitimate emails, and sophisticated spam often masks itself as legitimate,
personalized, or "important" content to bypass automated AI-based
filters’.
It was almost a relief to
hear from a poor French-woman today who was caught by one of those
hugger-muggers (Eastern Europeans who wisely avoid stealing from Spaniards).
She lost her thief-proof Cartier watch in a tris-tras which, the husband
told me, he himself couldn’t have removed from her wrist in less than a minute.
And thus we continue, one eye
on our purse, as the world turns.
What’s that? Trump’s dead?
Click on this link.