210 Comments
- sarazen, on 10/10/2007, -5/+180P - P - P - Powerbook!
- elhof, on 10/10/2007, -6/+177"By the time you realise you've been scammed, Al-Amin Ibn Dada III from Nigeria is balls deep in stripper."
Dugg. - johnny222, on 10/10/2007, -2/+73Managed to get them all before it went down fully. All images load, no ads:
page 1: http://isthatclear.com/digg/index.htm
page 2: http://isthatclear.com/digg/index2.htm
page 3: http://isthatclear.com/digg/index3.htm
page 4: http://isthatclear.com/digg/index4.htm - Trocisp, on 10/10/2007, -5/+53Anyone else notice
Pen.is Centeral? - lkeg56demn, on 10/10/2007, -18/+62First page, the only one i could get before it went down:
After two years of dabbling as both buyer and seller, I have come to the conclusion that eBay is a cesspool of filth. Within thirty minutes of placing my first bid, for example, I was hit with no less than three spam messages from other sellers trying to entice me with a better deal.
Most users see these emails for what they are: scams. But occasionally a new (and particularly daft) user will be conned out of hundreds or even thousands of dollars.
The Scammer
Last week, my cell phone died. Having once worked in a phone shop, I know that for a consumer hoping for a refund, "died" can mean any number of things...
"Oh, well it did drop in the toilet first."
"So what if I slept on it?"
"But my old phone could survive being used as a hockey puck!"
When I say that my phone "died", however, I mean that it was working perfectly when I went into the cinema and that since coming out, its most effective function has been serving as a paper weight on my desk. I can only assume that it was overcome, during Superbad, by Michael Cera's lovable performance.
Such were the circumstances under which I logged onto eBay, hoping to snare a bargain. After submitting a sufficiently generous bid, I received the following email message from a random eBay member:
Hi,
I'm the owner of this item (similar the one you've recently bided on): "Sony Ericsson T226 AT&T Wireless Cell Phone GOOD".
I am in a bussines trip for 3 weeks and i want to close the auction earlier because i don't have time for it so please let me know your best price. I'll provide you 5 days money back guarantee, no questions asked. That means within 5 working days you decide if you don't want to keep the item. The deal will go strictly according to ebay's rules and policy regarding to this buy it now offer- to start the official transaction, i need to know:
Your best price:
First name:
Last name:
Shipping address:
City/State:
Country:
Zip:
As soon as i have them i'll start the official procedure, and ebay will notify you about this. You'll also receive important guidelines + instructions from them (please go through them exactly).
I'll handle and pay for the shipping, so this will be free of charge for you. Waiting for your answer ASAP!
Thank you
< goodyear03@gmail.com>
Free shipping, money-back guarantee, and all according to "official procedure"? Wow! At whom do I throw my money?
My Response
For those who have not heard of Goatse, you can still be saved. The picture depicts a naked man's backside, stretched beyond the point of abstraction. By this I mean: you literally could not comprehend what I'm talking about until you see it.
Indeed, many people's first reaction is to stare, horrified, for a full thirty seconds before they can believe what they are seeing. This guy could traffic enough crack over the border to kill the population of a small town. Do not, ever, view this image.
I sent this image to the scammer.
Replying almost immediately, I attached thirteen pictures of Goatse. As the scammer used a gmail account, I knew these images would display automatically on his screen (without having to download each one at a time).
All thirteen, in one hit.
The Scammer's Response
The following afternoon, I received an instant message from the scammer, and our conversation is shown below (with some punctuation and capitalisation fixed for readability, but not spelling). Much to my amusement, I was condemned as evil by a man whose screen name was "good".
But there is nothing amusing about a thief so thoroughly convinced of his own righteousness.
Good: Mother.
Good: *****.
Good: You are satan.
Good: What the ***** have you send me you piece of *****?
Good: That horible picture.
Good: ***** your music rock.
Good: Go in hell.
Mauso: AHAHAHAHAHAHAHA.
Mauso: Oh man.
Mauso: You suck, dude.
Good: ***** your rock.
Mauso: Dude, what 'rock' are you talking about?
Good: And your mother and your father and your sister and all of you.
Mauso: I'm a classical man.
Good: You are a *****.
Good: That's what you are.
Mauso: I like that I'm being condemned by a spammer and scammer.
Mauso: Quite the touch of irony.
Good: Yeah you are a loser.
Mauso: See, I'm not fazed one bit. Because you are a *****.
Good: I'm a smarter opponent.
Mauso: You are a scammer.
Good: Because I know how to scame people.
Good: You now to merlin menson's ass.
Mauso: No. Wrong. You know how to scam the dumbest 0.0001% of internet users.
Mauso: Everyone else - that is to say, 99.9999% - is smarter than you are.
Good: Good. That what you think.
Mauso: Yeah, *****. It pretty much is.
Good: And if you will continue I will let you know what I can do for real.
Good: In two days I will get your bank account and I will clear all your money from your account.
Good: I promise that.
Mauso: No.
Good: You will see what a real hacker can do.
Mauso: You won't.
Good: Yes I do and I promise that.
Mauso: Not, for one hundredth of a second, do you scare me.
Good: You will see what a real hacker is.
Good: Because I'm not a scammer I'm a hacker.
Good: and a real hacker will broke the NASA password.
Good: So I promise that in 2 days you will lose all your penny
Good: from your account a bank.
Mauso: Awww, you broke the NASA password, that's cute.
Mauso: You're a cutie.
Good: Hahaha.
Good: No.
Good: But I can.
Mauso: No, sure, I believe you!
Mauso: *Wink*
Good: I will not broke NASA password because I will be catch.
Good: By the police.
Mauso: Hey, have you seen this website? http://www.lemonparty.org/ [To readers: this is a shock site. Do not click.]
Mauso: If you are truly a hacker, you could break into that website.
Mauso: Go on, try.
Pause.
Good: I will stole your money from your bank account, you *****.
Good: You will see that HAHAHA.
Mauso: You are, without the thinnest sliver of a doubt, the dumbest person on the internet I have ever met.
Good: OK then.
Good: We wil see who is the smarter and who is the dumbest.
Good: Do your trust in good
Good: God
Mauso: I don't even know what the ***** you are saying now. Is that a question?
Good: No is your mothert
Good: Mother
Mauso: What the hell, are you 14 years old?
Good: cooksucker
Mauso: Sweet merciful christ, I've met smarter dog turds than you.
Good: No I'm your mother in cook.
Mauso: If I were to build the perfect idiot robot, who spouted nothing but incomprehensible feces, its name would be "good".
Mauso: Your penis is tiny.
Mauso: Did i mention that?
Minutes Later.
Mauso: Hacked into my bank account yet?
Mauso: You're pretty slow.
Mauso: To be totally honest.
Mauso: I thought you would have drained my account by now.
Mauso: *Gets popcorn*
Later.
Mauso: I had sex with your mother.
Barely able to contain my laughter, I posted the transcript online where it would go on to receive 25,000 views in a single afternoon.
The scammer had stopped replying to my messages. I stopped taunting him.
Nobody could have predicted that things were just getting started. - PikkonX, on 10/10/2007, -2/+46Link for anyone who has never heard The Tale of the Powerbook: http://www.zug.com/pranks/powerbook/
- Digitalfilm43, on 10/10/2007, -2/+42Good story. Well done.
- ers35, on 10/10/2007, -1/+39No, because unlike you, we've been on the Internet for more than a few hours.
- dougallj, on 10/10/2007, -0/+26I thought everyone clicked on that five years ago...
:( - Xoti, on 10/10/2007, -9/+35Pwn'd.
- qhor, on 10/10/2007, -9/+34Page 2 of 4
Two Days Later
The scammer had made a threat. He had promised to clear my bank accounts in two days: "So I promise that in 2 days you will lose all your penny."
In the 48 hours that followed, there is no doubt in my mind that the closest Goodyear03 came to hacking "my penny" would have been typing random passwords into an online bank client.
>> Login Mauso
>> Pass merlin menson
Username and password do not match. Try again.
>> Login Mauso
>> Pass cooksucker
Username and password do not match. Try again.
>> Login Mauso
>> Pass let me in
Username and password do not match. Try again.
>> Login Mauso
>> Pass i'm your mother in cook
Too many attempts. Try again later.
Also, that makes no ***** sense whatsoever.
During those 48 hours, I scoured the internet for any information that would help me pin down this scammer. Though I doubted he had ever truly scammed anyone, the intention was there. I wanted to do something that would stop him from ever trying again.
I had three leads:
1. He was an eBay scammer. This narrowed my search down to only a few thousand people, plus half the population of Nigeria.
2. I knew one of his email addresses. It did not appear on any list of "known scammers".
3. He was probably fat.
But it was no use. I decided I had to get inside his mind. And so I set off to the library, where I delved into the startling psychology of an online thief. In "How To Scam People in 5 Easy Steps", Dr. Oxford writes:
The scammer preys on two things.
First, he will prey on your excitement. You receive an email offering you a Mega Dildomatic for the price of a Mini Dildomatic. In the excitement, you hurry to the Post Office and shoot out a money order. By the time you realise you've been scammed, Al-Amin Ibn Dada III from Nigeria is balls deep in stripper.
Secondly, he relies on your stupidity. Everyone knows the only difference between the Mega Dildomatic and the Mini Dildomatic is the packaging. See point 1.
Now, if I could name for you two qualities that accurately describe Goodyear03, they would be "greedy" and "stupid". The exact two qualities a scammer would look for in a victim.
Goodyear03 was to be my victim.
The Sting.
"The average scammer sends between four and five hundred different emails per week. Only a fraction of these yield a return. But with cunning and ingenuity, it is possible to avoid the common pitfalls that befall most scammers.
First and foremost, you must keep your story straight! When exchanging emails with a target, for example, nothing will set off his alarm bells faster than your name changing from "Arseballs Cockingsworth" to "Assballs Cockingsworth" in the span of a day."
- Dr. Oxford, on the importance of consistency.
(How To Scam People in 6 Easy Steps, p. 12.)
As the 48-hour mark approached, I created a pair of gmail accounts called goodyear003 and gervais16. From the first account to the second, I emailed a message almost identical to the one goodyear03 had originally sent me.
I then logged into Gervais' account and sent the following reply to goodyear03.
Hi goodyear03,
Here is my information, as requested:
Your best price: $250
First name: Ricky
Last name: Gervais
Shipping address: [Witheld]
City/State: Malden, MA
Country: USA
Zip: 02148
Free shipping sounds great! Please let me know if there is anything else you need from me.
Cheers
Ricky.
Would the scammer really fall for that? If he glanced down at the conversation history, surely he'd notice the extra "0" in goodyear003?
No, goodyear03 would be too busy eyeing "$250". First, he will prey on your excitement.
Secondly, he relies on your stupidity. If a scammer truly sends hundreds of emails, then he would not remember whether "gervais16" had ever been a target in the first place.
Sure enough, an email arrived within the hour: - ToadLeg, on 10/10/2007, -1/+23Well, that NASA password is hard to crack. If you have Linux you have to open the "Hack NASA" program and click on "Crack the NASA Password", then select "Yes" in the confirmation box.
- Xoti, on 10/10/2007, -8/+30OMG WHAT THE *****.
- qhor, on 10/10/2007, -1/+22Hrm... looks like Coral is going slowly / very slowly / dead / dugg.
A kind digger (below), johnny222, provided his own mirrors for all the pages, including 3 & 4:
page 3: http://isthatclear.com/digg/index3.htm
page 4: http://isthatclear.com/digg/index4.htm - Xoti, on 10/10/2007, -9/+30What?
- Xoti, on 10/10/2007, -10/+31WHAT THE *****!?
- Xoti, on 10/10/2007, -10/+31HOW THE *****.....!?
- Xoti, on 10/10/2007, -10/+31HOLY ***** ***** HOW DID.....OMG ***** HELL!
- mauso, on 10/10/2007, -4/+24Guys? I think Xoti just went and found discovered the meaning of "Goatse"...
Now you are a man.
A man who wants to kill himself. Welcome to the club! - SomeHobo, on 10/10/2007, -0/+20Ah crap... just had the time to read the first page and now its down... what a way to leave us on a cliff hanger!
- mauso, on 10/10/2007, -1/+20Thanks mate.
- Bonesy17, on 10/10/2007, -2/+19lol, Nicely done dude.
Bring down the scammers!!! - mauso, on 10/10/2007, -0/+16You might have seen the initial chat log from page 1, however everything that follows in pages 2-4 have never been uploaded publicly before.
- onebit, on 10/10/2007, -15/+30 The World's Worst Scammer Print E-mail
Written by Mauso elMaco
Saturday, 29 September 2007
Article Index
The World's Worst Scammer
Page 2
Page 3
Page 4
Page 2 of 4
Two Days Later
The scammer had made a threat. He had promised to clear my bank accounts in two days: "So I promise that in 2 days you will lose all your penny."
In the 48 hours that followed, there is no doubt in my mind that the closest Goodyear03 came to hacking "my penny" would have been typing random passwords into an online bank client.
>> Login Mauso
>> Pass merlin menson
Username and password do not match. Try again.
>> Login Mauso
>> Pass cooksucker
Username and password do not match. Try again.
>> Login Mauso
>> Pass let me in
Username and password do not match. Try again.
>> Login Mauso
>> Pass i'm your mother in cook
Too many attempts. Try again later.
Also, that makes no ***** sense whatsoever.
During those 48 hours, I scoured the internet for any information that would help me pin down this scammer. Though I doubted he had ever truly scammed anyone, the intention was there. I wanted to do something that would stop him from ever trying again.
I had three leads:
1. He was an eBay scammer. This narrowed my search down to only a few thousand people, plus half the population of Nigeria.
2. I knew one of his email addresses. It did not appear on any list of "known scammers".
3. He was probably fat.
But it was no use. I decided I had to get inside his mind. And so I set off to the library, where I delved into the startling psychology of an online thief. In "How To Scam People in 5 Easy Steps", Dr. Oxford writes:
The scammer preys on two things.
First, he will prey on your excitement. You receive an email offering you a Mega Dildomatic for the price of a Mini Dildomatic. In the excitement, you hurry to the Post Office and shoot out a money order. By the time you realise you've been scammed, Al-Amin Ibn Dada III from Nigeria is balls deep in stripper.
Secondly, he relies on your stupidity. Everyone knows the only difference between the Mega Dildomatic and the Mini Dildomatic is the packaging. See point 1.
Now, if I could name for you two qualities that accurately describe Goodyear03, they would be "greedy" and "stupid". The exact two qualities a scammer would look for in a victim.
Goodyear03 was to be my victim.
The Sting.
"The average scammer sends between four and five hundred different emails per week. Only a fraction of these yield a return. But with cunning and ingenuity, it is possible to avoid the common pitfalls that befall most scammers.
First and foremost, you must keep your story straight! When exchanging emails with a target, for example, nothing will set off his alarm bells faster than your name changing from "Arseballs Cockingsworth" to "Assballs Cockingsworth" in the span of a day."
- Dr. Oxford, on the importance of consistency.
(How To Scam People in 6 Easy Steps, p. 12.)
As the 48-hour mark approached, I created a pair of gmail accounts called goodyear003 and gervais16. From the first account to the second, I emailed a message almost identical to the one goodyear03 had originally sent me.
I then logged into Gervais' account and sent the following reply to goodyear03.
Hi goodyear03,
Here is my information, as requested:
Your best price: $250
First name: Ricky
Last name: Gervais
Shipping address: [Witheld]
City/State: Malden, MA
Country: USA
Zip: 02148
Free shipping sounds great! Please let me know if there is anything else you need from me.
Cheers
Ricky.
Would the scammer really fall for that? If he glanced down at the conversation history, surely he'd notice the extra "0" in goodyear003?
No, goodyear03 would be too busy eyeing "$250". First, he will prey on your excitement.
Secondly, he relies on your stupidity. If a scammer truly sends hundreds of emails, then he would not remember whether "gervais16" had ever been a target in the first place.
Sure enough, an email arrived within the hour:
Image
eBay Offer! -- Buy The Item You Recently Bid On
Dear gervais16 ,
Thank you for using eBay, we verified all the details of this transaction. We concluded that they were accurate. Please follow our instructions to complete the transaction safely.
Image
The following item(s) are protected in this eBay transaction :
Item Name:
Sony Ericsson K750 K750i Unlocked 2MP
Item Number: 200143989919
Item Price: 250.00$ / Amount insured.
Shipping: Ready to ship/ The price includes shipping and insurance fees.
Payment Status: Pending.
Complete your eBay transaction in 5 easy steps:
1.
Buyer and seller agree on the transaction terms and the selling price.
2.
Seller contacts eBay with the transaction details.
3.
The buyer sends payment to an eBay Representative and not to the seller directly. After the payment was received, eBay will notify the seller to start the shipping.
4.
Buyer receives the merchandise and has five days to inspect it.
5.
The buyer will contact eBay with the result of the inspection.
PAYMENT INSTRUCTIONS:
Next step to be taken: The buyer must send the payment by Western Union Money Transfer to Adrian Dunca.
Adrian Dunca
[Street witheld]
Rm. Valcea
Romania, 1000.
Purchase protection and refund:
Transactions with this eBay seller Adrian Dunca, goodyear03@gmail.com, are covered by purchase protection against fraud and description errors.
Image
Thank you for using eBay!
* * *
Look closely: the scammer cannot keep his story straight. First, I am told to send $250 to eBay representative Adrian Dunca, whose function is to verify the payment.
I am then happily informed that the seller, too, is named Adrian Dunca. Do you see the problem here?
I practically walk to the scammer's front door, asking permission to throw money at him, and he devotes all of his effort to discrediting himself. In addition to all this, he supplies me with the most crucial detail of all.
His address.
Click here to continue reading:
3 Ways to Destroy a Scammer - mauso, on 10/10/2007, -0/+15Did I get my money back?
Oh, you mean the entire two pennies that I sent him?
To be fair, the Western Union chick gave the money order to me for free because... you know, it's $0.02.
Chin up, cranky boots. - onebit, on 10/10/2007, -15/+29 The World's Worst Scammer Print E-mail
Written by Mauso elMaco
Saturday, 29 September 2007
Article Index
The World's Worst Scammer
Page 2
Page 3
Page 4
Page 3 of 4
3 Ways to Destroy a Scammer
Do you remember that hot girl in school you always wanted? You could look, but could never touch. Except if you looked, her boyfriend would punch a hole through your neck?
Well, google her name. Put it in quotes, and include her city if necessary. By now, you have probably discovered her MySpace. Now click the "Add Friend" button.
You, my amigo, have just been e-laid.
Such is the power of Google.
When goodyear03 gave me his address, I googled the street and began trawling through the results. His address was listed on at least 3 databases of known scammer locations, and in one case, a woman by the name of Marie posted her account of being e-robbed:
I recieved email from the indvidual with eBay's logos and even with tablinks that takes you to see the item that you are purchasing (just like eBay). It was very convincing...
I never recieved product after 2-3 weeks. I emailed the seller requesting a refund. Of course, I never recieved that either.
- Rip Off Report.com
Every person who has ever been scammed, in the history of all scams, ever, claim "it was very convincing". Nevertheless, the scammer's address once again matched up with that of goodyear03.
Amazingly, he had successfully pulled off a scam. This made him even more of a bastard in my mind, and all the more deserving of what I had planned.
Another search result uncovered an archived WHOIS page for a web-design company, listing the administrator's contact details. The administrator's address matched that of the scammer's, and a phone number was also listed. This was getting better by the minute.
Further investigation into the company, through the Romanian Business Register, revealed some startling financial information:
Image
Above: Total turnover in 4 years of operation? 25 EURO.
Evidently, the family business isn't doing so well.
Aliases. Within an hour of searching, I was able to link 6 different names to the scammer's address. Most of these names were, presumably, fake.
It was time for serious action. I collated my data and came to a decision: every day, for five days straight, I would send goodyear03 a different item, each time addressed to a different one of his aliases.
Why? Recently in Romania (indeed, in this scammer's very own city), the police have cracked down on - and arrested - thirty eBay scammers. We know from our chat log that this guy has scammed before (and admits it proudly). Therefore he has something to fear.
Imagine, therefore, receiving daily mail signed from "Mauso", each one addressed to a different person, slowly working their way through the list of your aliases.
Day 1. Goatse-by-Mail
Forty-eight hours had passed since our chatlog, and my bank account was no closer to being "drained of all its penny" than goodyear03 was to forgetting the horrors of goatse. For you see, with the scammer's physical address, the very first thing I did was post him a full-page printout of the gaping, red chasm that is goatse.
Image
On the reverse side of the sheet, I wrote in the corner:
Image
Day 2. Origami....
On the second day, I sent the scammer a little something of my own devising. It was a little origami thing I put together a couple of weeks ago while I was bored:
Image
Image
When I was in early primary school, the girls in my class used to make these. I forget how it worked, but you'd pick a number and it would correspond to one of the origami's "flaps", underneath each of which was written something about yourself, such as who you'd end up marrying, or what your job would be. It was a fun little game, to pretend it told something about ourselves...
Underneath each of the flaps, I wrote something about goodyear03.
Image
SPAMMER
Image
SCAMMER
Image
THIEF
Image
VIRGIN
After doing this, I folded it up neatly and wrote a simple message on the outside:
Image
OPEN ME AND LOOK INSIDE YOURSELF
I then place the origami inside of a card, and wrote my own message:
Image
Click to read full size.
Image
Image
3. Merlin Manson!
I obtained a poster of Marilyn Manson and sent it to goodyear03.
Image
And on the reverse side of the poster, I succinctly wrote:
Image
Image
To the package I added another piece of origami, but this time there was nothing written under the flaps. You had to unfold it, bit by bit, until the full horror of goatse was (yet again) revealed.
Image
I burnt 12 copies of John Cheese's "Activate!" to a blank CD and added it to the package.
***
After sending the third package in as many days, I strutted out of the post office quite content with myself. The only last thing I had to do for the day was to buy a textbook, so I headed for the ridiculously-overpriced store. Having checked my bank account balance the previous night, I knew I was in the clear.
As I approached the register, I handed the check-out girl my bank card. We amused ourselves with small-talk until the tiny swipe-machine emitted a sudden beep.
"I'm sorry," the girl said, biting her lip as she handed me the receipt. "But your card has been declined."
I froze.
Click here to continue reading:
Thrilling Conclusion! - inactive, on 10/10/2007, -0/+14Grandpa?
- zuppy, on 10/10/2007, -3/+16another good old ebay "scammer scam":
http://www.zug.com/pranks/powerbook/ - miztaken, on 10/10/2007, -1/+14Hence, thats why he sent the picture of Goatse.
- kimad, on 10/10/2007, -0/+13why did you continue to look after the first picture?!
- mauso, on 10/10/2007, -1/+14This has been mirrored thanks to johnny222:
page 1: http://isthatclear.com/digg/index.htm
page 2: http://isthatclear.com/digg/index2.htm
page 3: http://isthatclear.com/digg/index3.htm
page 4: http://isthatclear.com/digg/index4.htm - dannyboy3020, on 10/10/2007, -2/+15Hehe, nice. I've had many ***** on eBay try to scam me. Refreshing to see such an article :]
- inactive, on 10/10/2007, -5/+17it's not the hundred diggs, it's a couple hundred clicking on the link at the same time.
- ferrazf, on 10/10/2007, -1/+12he deserved more, I was expecting to learn he's in jail at the end of the story
- burke, on 10/10/2007, -0/+11uh..... huh......
- eatbeefjerky, on 10/10/2007, -0/+11This is as awesome as the dude who posted the IM conversation with the kid who tried to use his mother's credit card to buy a WoW account and then put a stop payment. Bahhahahahahaha, "Ricky Gervais", you are my hero.
- rdn98, on 10/10/2007, -0/+10wow classic story, this guy is my new hero
- schoate09, on 10/10/2007, -0/+10Just because he said that, doesn't change the accuracy. There's roughly the same amount of people who click without digging for each article, therefore rendering a percentage, and if that percentage is applied to a low number of diggs, it's safe to assume the mirror didn't handle many "clicks".
- superdoofus, on 10/10/2007, -2/+11i bet you're as thrilling to have around at a party as you are here.
- terminal157, on 10/10/2007, -0/+9Sexual gratification, duh.
- chancesarent, on 10/10/2007, -7/+15the *****?
- wiifm69, on 10/10/2007, -0/+8I only wish his server would stop sucking, could only read the first two pages :(
- REM333, on 10/10/2007, -5/+13mirror: http://pen.iscentral.net.nyud.net:8080/main/index. ...
slow as ***** but it works - ChefAnubis, on 10/10/2007, -0/+7WTF?
- fisj139, on 10/10/2007, -1/+8Karma?
- tingrin87, on 10/10/2007, -0/+6and i quote
"Pwn'd." - dmgordon, on 10/10/2007, -2/+8Classic. I haven't read a good counter-scam in a while.
- mr1337, on 10/10/2007, -1/+7"I had sex with your mother." <-- Hilarious!
- stylerm, on 10/10/2007, -2/+7I agree. He shouldn't have split it up into 4 pages, even though it helps his hit count. I wanted to read it, buy can't. buried.
- qhor, on 10/10/2007, -4/+9And Coral caught pages 3 and 4...
Page 3 (mirror): http://pen.iscentral.net.nyud.net/main/index.php?o ...
Page 4 (mirror): http://pen.iscentral.net.nyud.net/main/index.php?o ... -
Show 51 - 100 of 205 discussions



What is Digg?
Browsing Digg on your phone just got easier with our enhancements to the