Re: Spam Re: TOP20BONUSES.COM - Online Signup Bonuses and Promotions for Online Poker, Online Casinos, Online Sportsbooks, Online Bingo, and other Cash Gaming sites on the web.



"Robert Perkis" <robertp@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:43B4A7E8.DDA263AE@xxxxxxxxxxxx
> Spam reported 12/29/2005 RP
>
> KrazieCanuck wrote:
>>
>> Visit http://www.top2Obonuses.con for some of the Top Online Signup
> [spam snip]

A perfect example. Do you honestly think that the originators of this ***
are the least bit concerned with the fact that they have been "reported" to
some fucking agency? Do you honestly think that the agency you supposedly
reported this infraction to really gives a ***...or has any power to do
anything about it? Does anybody here really care one way or the other?

If you answered "yes" to any of the above, then I'm afraid you are seriously
deluding yourself about the effectiveness of your painstaking vigilance on
behalf of this newsgroup.

Modern software and filtering methods allow users to control this kind of
*** to a degree that they are comfortable with. It may show up in their
readers but so what? The days when most users were on severely limited
bandwidth and paid by the freakin' minute are long gone. The time and bother
of downloading the headers for such messages has long since ceased to be a
concern.

If you and a few others here are still stuck on antiquated dialup
connections and using communication software on PC's that are sadly outdated
then consider giving the rest of us a fucking break. Why should I or anybody
else have to even download or sift through the headers of your responses to
the spammers? In most cases, your responses are just *adding* to the problem
of wasted bandwidth rather than curing it. Has this never occurred to you?

Here's a question that I struggle with: Does the supposed "moderator" of an
*unmoderated* newsgroup really have much to say about anything that goes on
in that newsgroup...or is he just another spear-carrier in a large and
diverse cast of characters? I lately tend to think that such a person is
about as useful as screen-doors on a submarine.



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