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Just
as we would want to forward an urgent "virus alert" we had just
received to all our friends, when someone receives an e-mail message telling of
a brave little girl, dying of cancer, who's last wish is to receive the most
email messages in the world, they want to send it to their friends. Resist
the urge. Please.
At
Least, before you take any action regarding re-emailing a touching chain
letter, check with someone you trust, or check it out yourself, to make sure
it's just not one of many Internet hoaxes. And our best advise: Just say
no to chain letters.
The
first paragraphs of CIAC's "Internet Chain Letters" page read:
-"The
Internet community is constantly being bombarded with chain letters in the form
of e-mail messages. They claim all manner of warnings and dire notices of doom
and gloom for your computer systems or for some poor soul somewhere, all of
which will be saved if you just send this message on to all of your
friends."
-
"Enter the world of the Internet chain letter. In the years before
computers, chain letters were common and were sent by U.S. mail and requested a
stamp. This limited the extent to which chain letters were passed on, because
sending them involved a real, up front cost in time to type the letters and
money for stamps. The fact that most chain letters asked you to send a dollar to
the top ten people in the chain caused most people to ignore them."
-
"Today, with the click of a button, a message can be forwarded to hundreds
of people at no apparent cost to the sender. If each of the so-called good
Samaritans sends the letter on to only ten other people (most send to huge
mailing lists), the ninth resending results in a billion e-mail messages,
thereby, clogging the network and interfering with the receiving of legitimate
e-mail messages. Factor in the time lost reading and deleting all these messages
and you see a real cost to organizations and individuals from these seemingly
innocuous messages."
-
"Not only are these messages time consuming and costly, they may also be
damaging to a person's or organization's reputation as in the case of the
Jessica Mydek and the American
Cancer Society chain
letters."
-
You
can find out more about this and other Internet "chain letters" from
the excellent CIAC article at their site at the CIAC
Chain Letters page.
Some
chain letters are just a means to use the Internet to forward non-computer
"hoaxes". by example, you can read about the great "Kidney
Harvest" hoax at several sites.
Another
problem with chain letters (however well-meaning) particularly on the Internet
via e-mail, is that they can develop "a life of their own" completely
separate from reality.
Take
for example the case of Craig Shergold involving the Make-A-Wish foundation.
This is a real boy who had a real brain tumor, but his tumor was successfully removed in 1991, and he's fully healed. And millions of e-mail letters still
come in, six years later, despite pleas from the family and others to put a
stop to the letters:
-BEGIN
QUOTED TEXT -
CRAIG
SHERGOLD
Make-A-Wish
Foundation® of America
100 W. Clarendon, Suite 2200
Phoenix, AZ 85013-3518
(800) 722-9474
Fax: (602) 279-0855
Media Release
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE -- Call (800) 215-1333, ext. 184 for pre-recorded Craig Shergold message
UPDATE ON CRAIG SHERGOLD
PHOENIX, AZ - - An unauthorized
chain letter encouraging people to send business cards to a seriously ill boy
continues to generate thousands of pieces of mail each day, even though the boy
is now healed and the family has requested an end to the mail.
News reports stated in 1989 that
Craig Shergold, a 9-year-old English boy diagnosed with a terminal brain tumor,
wanted to be recorded in the Guinness Book of World Records for receiving the
most greeting cards. His wish was fulfilled in 1990 after receiving 16 million
cards.
Shergold's tumor was successfully
removed in March 1991. However, the cards and letters continue. Several versions
of the letter exist, most of which wrongly claim that the young boy remains
terminally ill and now wants to receive the largest number of business cards.
The addressee is encouraged to gather business cards, forward them to an
incorrect address in Georgia and then forward the chain letter to 10 friends.
"The chain letter claims
that Make-A-Wish is involved," stated James E. Gordon, Chairman of the
Board of the Make-A-Wish Foundation of America. "That is not true. Our
organization is not, and has never been associated with the letter. Yet our
office continues to receive numerous phone calls each month about the letter,
diverting our staff time and resources from our mission. The Make-A-Wish
Foundation requests that people please stop sending business cards or greeting
cards to Craig Shergold."
The Make-A-Wish Foundation of
America has set up a special 800 number to explain the situation. Callers can
listen to a pre-recorded message by dialing (800) 215-1333, ext. 184.
Make-A-Wish
Foundation of America, based in Phoenix, has 82 chapters in the United States.
Any child between the ages of two-and-a-half and 18 who has been determined to
have a life-threatening illness is eligible to receive a wish. The first wish
was granted in Phoenix in 1980, and since then Make-A-Wish has granted more than
37,000 wishes ranging from building a backyard fishing pond to an all-expense
paid trip to Disney World.
For
further information regarding the Make-A-Wish Foundation and qualifying
children, contact (800) 722-9474.
-END
QUOTED TEXT -
Note: When receiving e-mail,
it is of good practice to never open any attachments include with any e-mail
message. There are exceptions of course when receiving these from someone you
now and trust or have requested that the information be sent to you. e-mail
attachment can contain harmful viruses and Trojan horses that can infect your
computer. These can range from very docile nuisance viruses to ones that can
wipe out your whole hard drive. Delete any attachments that are in question
(most all) immediately after receiving them. If you happen to get
"infected" be sure and purchase and use a good virus protection
software. But even having the "latest and greatest" software can't
fully protect you from the
"latest and greatest" viruses.
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