Too good to be true. Is not.
[QUOTE=BlowInHer;5339881]In contact, staying at a place where the rood is red in the campus area. Won't send a verification pic, but will facetime. I do not ever use my real number, so that's off the table. Looks good, but she told me she use to street walk. I did get a room number, but didn't pull the trigger. I have a feeling she is legit, but not rolling the dice unless someone has more info.
[URL]https://columbus.skipthegames.com/female-escorts/caucasian_w/hot-blonde-ready-to-have-funn/289553504422[/URL][/QUOTE]I wondered the same thing as she looks smoking hot. Does not sound like an addict or a nympho but does have a nasty attitude when you ask simple questions about her. Rates are decent IF she is real but I have a feeling that she might be the bait for a set-up. Hear me out, I scoped the area where she was and to my surprise I noticed a couple of men around the place and inside a black SUV with no visible tag while it was pouring down in the rain. I got a bad odd feeling about this one since the verification is mandatory; why? Maybe to know and identify the person walking with cash in his pocket that won't go to the cops to snitch on itself? I don't think so. BE CAREFUL GUYS!
Strangest eros ad I have seen and likely phishing scam
I saw this add the other day on Eros, for an escort named Marja. If it's not a scam, then it's one of the worst executed ad's, I have ever come across.
The add is on eros, [URL]https://www.eros.com/ohio/files/4557696.htm?cat=1[/URL].
The entire add is crazy, and looks like it was entered by someone with little grasp of the English language, as well as little to know understanding of the internet. The text of the add, reads highly like phishing attempts by the same people who run the various cold call phone scams saying they are the IRS, or your "Windows Computer has a virus," or similar. I suspect it is at least an attempt to gain an email address that will target you another way.
Like many such phishing scams, they start with all caps (which I uncapped, since all caps drives me nuts), is the following: "your email won't send w / o this exact copied and pasted quote or w / xtra text:" The text reads like something written by someone to whom English is a second language. While this might make a bit of sense due to the Eastern European sounding of Marja. The wording in the next part of the phrase, "I agree, am not opposed, & have time NOW for these steps. " especially the "I agree, am not opposed" I have heard this type of phrasing more often from Indians, where they forget the conjunction "and," in certain phrases, then immediately use it later. Eastern Europeans I have met tend to understand the grammatical use of "and" better.
Now as bad as that was here is where it gets completely goofy. The email address contactlink at [URL]autoreplyservice.com[/URL], looks like the user didn't quite understand the instructions he was given, when he came up with the ad. So unless there actually is an email dns address of [URL]autoreplyservice.com[/URL], the email will fail.