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  • Report:  #203133

Complaint Review: Penis Enlarge Patch Rx 2005 - Liu Fang

p***s Enlarge Patch Rx 2005 - Liu Fang Unsolicited Email To Underage Minor, no physical address on Who Is, No City or Country ripoff Internet

  • Reported By:
    Marble Falls Texas
  • Submitted:
    Thu, July 27, 2006
  • Updated:
    Fri, July 28, 2006
  • Penis Enlarge Patch Rx 2005 - Liu Fang
    Guang Zhou 516000
    Nationwide
    China, People's Republic of
  • Phone:
    86-2032199832
  • Category:

Received unsolicited email in my daughters email account. Researched this company or individual has no physical address or contact information on the website. They do have some heft prices. The Who Is database also shows limited information on who this company or indiviual is. Beware!

Bradey
Marble Falls, Texas
U.S.A.

15 Updates & Rebuttals


Peter

Pony,
Alabama,
U.S.A.

Attacking?

#16Consumer Comment

Fri, July 28, 2006

I did not interpret anyone's comments as "attacking" the OP. However, it does seem a bit peculiar that the OP would go to such lengths to research and investigate ONE particular SPAM email, in a day and age when millions of such emails are distributed every day. Most people simply automatically delete such emails without thinking twice, and certainly while not opening them to read their content. The ract that this guy did just the opposite may raise a few eyebrows. Complaining about "hefty prices" may indicate he was considering ordering said product from the company but was disappointed with the cost, and is now trying to flam-bash the company online. I dunno ... it all sounds a bit strange to me.


Peter

Pony,
Alabama,
U.S.A.

Attacking?

#16Consumer Comment

Fri, July 28, 2006

I did not interpret anyone's comments as "attacking" the OP. However, it does seem a bit peculiar that the OP would go to such lengths to research and investigate ONE particular SPAM email, in a day and age when millions of such emails are distributed every day. Most people simply automatically delete such emails without thinking twice, and certainly while not opening them to read their content. The ract that this guy did just the opposite may raise a few eyebrows. Complaining about "hefty prices" may indicate he was considering ordering said product from the company but was disappointed with the cost, and is now trying to flam-bash the company online. I dunno ... it all sounds a bit strange to me.


Robert

Jacksonville,
Florida,
U.S.A.

Stop busting this guy's chops

#16Consumer Comment

Fri, July 28, 2006

He doesn't want his daughter looking at thi stuff. I understand that. He wants her to be innocent as long as possible. She'll see the real thing soon enough, but he wants her childhood to be just that...a childhood.


Marc

Makaha,
Hawaii,
U.S.A.

Why are you attacking the guy?

#16Consumer Comment

Fri, July 28, 2006

If I started receiving ads like that I'd want to know who I'm dealing with too. It's a new company that can get by his protection, and he'd maybe like some suggestions on how to permanently stop it and to warn you about them. That's all he did.


Steve

Cary,
North Carolina,
U.S.A.

HUH?

#16Consumer Comment

Fri, July 28, 2006

You (or your daughter) received a spam email, so you decided to research the company?! Why not just delete it and add the sender to a "blocked" list?

So in this "research" did you go the actual website? And that is how you know they have "hefty" prices?!


Steve

Cary,
North Carolina,
U.S.A.

HUH?

#16Consumer Comment

Fri, July 28, 2006

You (or your daughter) received a spam email, so you decided to research the company?! Why not just delete it and add the sender to a "blocked" list?

So in this "research" did you go the actual website? And that is how you know they have "hefty" prices?!


Steve

Cary,
North Carolina,
U.S.A.

HUH?

#16Consumer Comment

Fri, July 28, 2006

You (or your daughter) received a spam email, so you decided to research the company?! Why not just delete it and add the sender to a "blocked" list?

So in this "research" did you go the actual website? And that is how you know they have "hefty" prices?!


Steve

Cary,
North Carolina,
U.S.A.

HUH?

#16Consumer Comment

Fri, July 28, 2006

You (or your daughter) received a spam email, so you decided to research the company?! Why not just delete it and add the sender to a "blocked" list?

So in this "research" did you go the actual website? And that is how you know they have "hefty" prices?!


Steve

Bradenton,
Florida,
U.S.A.

Bradey...change spam filters.

#16Consumer Suggestion

Thu, July 27, 2006

You need a filter that does 100% verification. There are only a few good ones out there.

Real spammers use forged headers and phony email addresses, and there is nobody there at a spammers email to verify, thus the email does not get through.

Only verifiable email addresses can get through. I use Computer Associates anti spam. It is 100%.

I agree that spam is a major problem, and I was not attacking you. It sounds like you made the effort, but there is more you can do.

I still don't agree that a young child should even have email access. There is no reason for it and it is just asking for trouble.

You can cofigure the email so only you have the password. Then you can download and screen the emails before your child reads them, and you can screen any emails before they get sent. This method will work 100%.

Good luck.


Bradey

Marble Falls,
Texas,
U.S.A.

Thanks For Your Response

#16Consumer Comment

Thu, July 27, 2006

Thanks for your suggestive comments!

If you guys would have noticed the start up date of this company (7/23/06).

My child is supervised, spam blocker, and is very responsible. I also took measures a bit further and I have a second monitor that sits in my office when she is on the internet, so I see everything. This is how I saw the email. Few minutes later she came to me with the problem.

The email snuck by the spam filters, I am not sure how and does not happen very often.

I think you guys jump the gun on trying to attack me instead of the solicitor.

Good Jobs Guys!


Peter

Pony,
Alabama,
U.S.A.

I agree

#16Consumer Comment

Thu, July 27, 2006

How about some parental supervision when your little one is using the internet? If that is not possible, how about instituting a program like Net Nanny or an email filter, or perhaps blocking email access completely?


Steve

Bradenton,
Florida,
U.S.A.

Bradey...ever heard of a spam filter?...OR parental cntrols?

#16Consumer Suggestion

Thu, July 27, 2006

Bradey,

I have no idea why a young child needs email anyway, however there are many good programs out there that stop all spam emails. You can set al of the variables, or set it to 100% confirmation by the sender which means no spam would get through.

Spam is a fact of life and the spammer has no way of knowing that the email address is that of a minor. The protection of your minor child is YOUR responsibility. I think setting some parental controls on the computer and maybe some supervision is the real answer.

Please remember a young child should NEVER be on the internet without direct supervision.


Steve

Bradenton,
Florida,
U.S.A.

Bradey...ever heard of a spam filter?...OR parental cntrols?

#16Consumer Suggestion

Thu, July 27, 2006

Bradey,

I have no idea why a young child needs email anyway, however there are many good programs out there that stop all spam emails. You can set al of the variables, or set it to 100% confirmation by the sender which means no spam would get through.

Spam is a fact of life and the spammer has no way of knowing that the email address is that of a minor. The protection of your minor child is YOUR responsibility. I think setting some parental controls on the computer and maybe some supervision is the real answer.

Please remember a young child should NEVER be on the internet without direct supervision.


Steve

Bradenton,
Florida,
U.S.A.

Bradey...ever heard of a spam filter?...OR parental cntrols?

#16Consumer Suggestion

Thu, July 27, 2006

Bradey,

I have no idea why a young child needs email anyway, however there are many good programs out there that stop all spam emails. You can set al of the variables, or set it to 100% confirmation by the sender which means no spam would get through.

Spam is a fact of life and the spammer has no way of knowing that the email address is that of a minor. The protection of your minor child is YOUR responsibility. I think setting some parental controls on the computer and maybe some supervision is the real answer.

Please remember a young child should NEVER be on the internet without direct supervision.


Steve

Bradenton,
Florida,
U.S.A.

Bradey...ever heard of a spam filter?...OR parental cntrols?

#16Consumer Suggestion

Thu, July 27, 2006

Bradey,

I have no idea why a young child needs email anyway, however there are many good programs out there that stop all spam emails. You can set al of the variables, or set it to 100% confirmation by the sender which means no spam would get through.

Spam is a fact of life and the spammer has no way of knowing that the email address is that of a minor. The protection of your minor child is YOUR responsibility. I think setting some parental controls on the computer and maybe some supervision is the real answer.

Please remember a young child should NEVER be on the internet without direct supervision.

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