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NSF Research Reveals Chain Letter Travel Patterns
Posted by
ScuttleMonkey
on Saturday May 17, @01:37AM
from the turn-off-the-paved-road dept.
from the turn-off-the-paved-road dept.
alphadogg writes to tell us that the NSF is researching chain letters and how they travel. The results aren't quite what one might expect, showing a pattern of more selective and circuitous travel. "One surprising finding was that messages often took meandering routes between people who knew each other, often through as many as 100 intermediaries. Many email users also received copies from multiple social groups. The researchers concluded that because messages come from many directions, there's ample opportunity for the messages to be edited along the way."
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ac (Score:5, Funny)
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Politically-motivated Chain Letters (Score:5, Interesting)
I'd be interested in how some of these patterns reveal themselves, especially for the Rovian whisper campaigns we see a lot of nowadays. While a liberal myself, I have a ton of conservative friends from disparate social circles who get the same types of "stupid liberals...tell your friends" chain letters that they always pass on to me lol.
The timing seems impeccable at times as well. After 9/11, they all passed on a "Palestinians did it" letter around the same time. Same with the "Obama is a Muslim" letter. Of course, geography might be an issue since they all live relatively close to me.
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Re:Politically-motivated Chain Letters (Score:5, Interesting)
Those are fun. I used to get those from one particular friend until I started sending point-by-point responses with links to government websites that actually gave the real facts behind the conservative hype. He stopped sending them to me. Either he got the point, or didn't want facts to get in the way of hype. I don't know which.
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Parent
Re:Politically-motivated Chain Letters (Score:5, Funny)
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Parent
Re:Politically-motivated Chain Letters (Score:4, Insightful)
Course, if it's something more scientific in nature, you might have to go to a major research university website... Oh, wait, half of those are technically government websites, too. Hmm.
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Parent
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
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I do know what you mean though, when I get chain letters I always reply to all with links to information that debunks it if any exists. At the bottom of such emails I always send links to snope
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Oh, come on, there's plenty of government websites that just present basic factual information on various bills going through congress or existing laws or whatever. But yes, government websit
Re:Politically-motivated Chain Letters (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:Politically-motivated Chain Letters (Score:5, Interesting)
Snopes, of course, says just the opposite of what the letter implies, but apparently most people will take the link alone at face value
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Re:Politically-motivated Chain Letters (Score:4, Insightful)
And liberal hype?
To the extent it's meaningful or productive, I could categorise myself as leaning left, but I won't. Idealogues of any type are embarrassing, even when you sympathise with some of their views.
In the past I've had a number of seemingly intelligent, well-mannered, and good-intentioned friends include me in their distribution lists, thinking I'd be receptive to their advocacy-message-of-the-day. I tolerated it with an occasional chuckle for a while until I discovered my name was being add to the distributions lists of other seemingly intelligent, well-mannered and good-intentioned people, people who were complete strangers.
The situation wasn't unlike sending a mail to subscriber-only mailing lists and have someone reply using an attribution style that includes the full name and mail address of the person they're quoting. Now the concept of the routinely putting everyone's name and email address in the body of an email may not cause any lightbulbs to turn on for the average person, but correlating having one's email address published all over the web with an increased level of SPAM, should. At least one would hope so.
To make a long story short, I did eventually (after much effort) get my name removed from all these bulk mailings, but not before I was deluged with SPAM and forced into abandoning my email account. Now I think twice before giving anyone my email address, seemingly intelligent, good-intentioned friends especially. It's a shame, really. What gets passed around by email by groups of people may not be interesting in itself, but seeing what people are doing with their spare time can be a hoot.
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Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
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Oh My Gosh! (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Oh My Gosh! (Score:4, Funny)
>>Oh my gosh! That email
about an email tracker is
>>TRUE!! Chain letters DO
get tracked! And guess
>>what? If you send
this information to 10 people,
>>you'll get a $100
GIFT CERTIFICATE!
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Parent
Logical Conclusion: (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re: (Score:3, Funny)
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sure.. patterns (Score:5, Funny)
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One of My Observations Is (Score:5, Interesting)
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Re:One of My Observations Is (Score:4, Interesting)
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Parent
Hey! National Enquirer! (Score:3, Insightful)
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Re: (Score:3, Funny)