Holger Bruns on 15 Oct 2000 16:17:00 -0000 |
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[Nettime-bold] More spam culture (fwd) |
Date: Sun, 15 Oct 2000 11:05:45 -0400 Reply-To: mcclenon@erols.com Sender: Spam Prevention Discussion List <SPAM-L@PEACH.EASE.LSOFT.COM> From: Bob McClenon <mcclenon@EROLS.COM> Subject: Media: Washington Post Article on Diploma Mills There is a long feature article in The Washington Post on Sunday, 15 October 2000, on page F1, continued on page F3, about diploma mills that advertise by spam. Gene Weingarten, the author of the article, a reporter for the Post, obtained a diploma from Brentwick University in London. The original price was $1400, but he was able to negotiate the price down to $750 because that was the maximum amount that The Washington Post was willing to pay. The diploma was accompanied by a transcript of courses supposedly taken between 1969 and 1973 and by letters of recommendation from professors. He and a woman named Michelle negotiated the courses that were listed. Weingarten consulted with a few experts. They concluded that the diploma mill did not actually break any law, but stayed just barely inside the law. In particular, Weingarten was not defrauded, and his money was not obtained under false pretenses. The international nature of the operation avoids any specific state laws that might prohibit this sort of operation. On the other hand, the experts noted that the uses of phony diplomas are mostly illegal. The one actual untrue statement made by Michelle involved Harvard University. In acknowledging that Brentwick University is unaccredited, she said that Harvard is also unaccredited. Weingarten reported that this is a common myth among diploma mill operators, and so may not have been an outright lie. Harvard is accredited. The Washington Post's L:ondon correspondent checked out the address for Brentwick University and found that it is a mail processing business in an unattractive area, and that Brentwick University is one of numerous customers. The price of $750 or $1400 for diplomas from diploma mills explains why they are a preferred spam for spam ring operators like Rodona and company. - - Bob McClenon _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold