

Spam with a capital “s” is Hormel Foods’ popular canned, precooked, meat product.
Spam with a small “s” are those unsolicited emails that mostly end up in our junk and spam files, thanks to spam filters. While some spam is just annoying and repetitive, many are sent by cybercriminals hoping we will respond and naively give them our credit card and social security numbers.
Then there is the spam that contains malware, giving scammers access to our personal information such as bank account details. These bad guys are fishing for information. Oops! That’s phishing with a “ph” in tech talk. It’s all about pilfering money—our money!
Spam got its name from Hormel’s Spam! In a 1970s episode of Monty Python’s Flying Circus, he lampooned a restaurant’s menu for including so much Spam. Years later, an administrator of a computer network communication systems company accidently posted 200 duplicate responses to his board. In tribute to Python, the reaction was spam, spam, spam! It stuck.
Heck, we wouldn’t open a can of Spam anymore than we would open a spam email! And, that means ignoring lots of emails. Over half of all global email traffic is spam. More than 300 billion spam emails pop up in various accounts every day, over 90% containing malware. Consider the 50 you received today a piece of cake.
For the last 20 years, October has been Cyber Security Awareness Month, a collaborative effort between government and industry to ensure we have the resources to stay safer online. Twenty years?? Hasn’t slowed scammers!
Surprisingly, it’s millennials who get scammed the most, not we seniors! Could it be a combination of comfort with the internet, more time online, and, well…hubris?? They reportedly fall for online shopping, investment, and employment scams.
Like most of you, we just ignore spam. But we decided to take a look and had some fun checking them out. Here’s what you are missing!
Wouldn’t the holidays be so much more fun if we could spend the $13,000 Bonus Hunters has deposited in our banking account and those $1,000 gift cards from JC Penney and Costco? Fuhgeddaboudit, as they say in mafia movies! These phishing spam scams are easy to spot; because, as they say, nothing in life is free.
The invitations to have sex can be amusing. Sick of your small penis? No, don’t need to watch your video. We’re not guys. Naked Anna wants to introduce us to the most “gorgeious” hot girls near us. Try spell check, honey. Another sexy fake spammer promised to do anything we wanted. Anything? Stop emailing us!
A congratulatory email from the IRS? As if! We are also entertained by the emails from Esmeraldo warning us that something extraordinary is about to happen and urging us to click on our horoscope. Yes, something extraordinarily bad will happen if we click on our horoscope!
Persistently, we get spam emails reportedly from the Geek Squad, Best Buy’s tech support service. Shouldn’t these geeks know how to fix this?? The Federal Trade Commission’s consumer advice website alerts the public to this scam. Had no idea the site even existed. You can see the scams the agency has identified and report a scam on the site. Heck, with the number of scams we get daily, reports could take hours. More companies should make public the scam frauds targeting them and contact their customers. We have only ever received one!
Scammers obviously think scare tactics will be an impetus for us to click on their email. iCloud warning: all your photos will be removed! Security Notice: suspicious viruses have been detected!
Spam filters trying to protect us from scams have an interesting list of words and phrases that cause an email to end up in our spam/junk files. These words could cause one of your emails to end up there as well. They include: amazing, congratulations, dear friend, click here, special promotion, and, entertainingly, this is not spam.
So, our Wrinkled Wisdom for today? Continue to ignore spam. Don’t open and try to unsubscribe. That just confirms that your email address is active and could lead to even more spam emails. Yuck! Gmail will automatically delete spam older than 30 days. If you are a bit OCD and don’t like seeing hundreds of emails sitting in your spam/junk files, just delete all. And if you are ever in Austin, Minnesota, visit the Spam Museum. It’s more interesting than you would think, and, hey, it’s free.