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Comment by wobfan

11 hours ago

I love how, on the "I am retiring page", the image of the old woman even has artifacts of the Gemini logo on the bottom right - someone very probably manually tried to blur them with a tool that was not meant for blurring.

Somehow, he or she was still convinced and put it up.

Because the sets of people who would give money to this and people who notice the Gemini logo are disjoint.

  • Yeah it was always a trick scammers used. Scam emails (the more obvious ones - not sophisticated phising) always had typos or subtle grammar errors because authors don't want to invest time in people that are able to spot such mistakes. It's the people that do not read thoroughly that are much more likely to fall for a scam.

    I would imagine it might be the same with those ads.

    • > authors don't want to invest time in people that are able to spot such mistakes

      This "just-so" story gets repeated constantly in threads about scams, but I've never seen anyone put up any actual proof. The more likely explanation is that scammers are just bad at English since they're predominantly from poor third-world countries.

      3 replies →

> Somehow, he or she was still convinced and put it up.

It is intentional. People who will not notice, are the least likely to complain later.

Do you know why all these “Nigerian prince” emails are of a very specific style?

You're famous now. The author noticed your comment and updated the article pointing it out.