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Sunday, January 7, 2018

Fast Money

Fast Money (stylized as MAKE.MONEY.FAST) is a title of an electronic forward chain letter that became so notorious that the word is now used to
describe all kinds of letters sent on the Internet, email-spam-by-news-group-by-usentet. Intrigued by anti-spammers, the name is often shortened to "MMF". History The original "Make Money Fast" letter was written by a person using the name Dave Rhodes before 1988. Biosphere details are not specific, and it is not that it is not the real name of such a person. Encourage email readers to send a dollar cash to a list of readers in a letter to readers and to add the name and address at the top after adding their own name and address below the list. [1] Using the theory behind the pyramid scheme, the chain will probably pay thousands of dollars to the participants in the chain because of the money flowing behind, as copies of their chain spread and many more people send dollars to their address. Dave Rhodes, a 7-day advocate college in Maryland, was a student of Columbia Union College (now the Washington Advocate University), who wrote the letter and uploaded it as a text file, almost a BBS 1987, according to Disex Daphodes of NET Knowledge Eugente News Group. [2] The first post of USGenet was posted by David Walton in 1989, also using the Columbia Union College account. Walton himself referred to himself as "Bizman Dave the Modem Slave" and posted "Dave Rhodes" in his post. [3] True identity of Dave Roads was not found. A supposed self-published website of Dave Rhodes found to be fake. [4] [5] Scams were forwarded to e-mails and uscent. By 1994 "Make Money Fast" is one of the most enduring spams with multiple variations. [6] [7] Discipline characters follow the template with a strictly predetermined format or small format (such as being asked to be a retired lawyer or to claim "report" to try to implement this plan). They quickly became repetitive, to be evolved for their massive ridicule or parody. A comprehensive parody begins, "GET.ARRESTED.FAST" and the line "Hi, I'm Dave Rhodes, and I'm in jail". [8] Another parody sent to the academic circle, "Create Tacture Fact", rather than sending money to the list of journal quotes.

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