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| | snopes.com | | | | | | snopes.com: <NOBR>Update #372</NOBR> Hello again from snopes, where we shed light on the wild tales you've heard! This <NOBR>e-mail</NOBR> gives information about new articles recently added to the snopes.com web site and provides pointers to older pieces about rumors and hoaxes still wandering into everyone's inboxes. Our last update mailing was <NOBR>12 July</NOBR> 2008. If after this update you are left wondering about something newly arrived in your inbox, our search engine stands ready to assist you. Bookmark that URL <NOBR>�?it's</NOBR> a keeper! An RSS feed for our What's New page is available at the following URL: http://www.snopes.com/info/whatsnew.xml
And now to the legends, the mayhem, and the misinformation! New Articles - E-mail purports to lay out what taxes will be like under a John McCain presidency versus a Barack Obama presidency.
- Account describes Navy SEALs' funereal tribute to Medal of Honor recipient Mike Monsoor.
- As seen on Jay Leno: Video shows a truck destroying the canopy over a bank's drive-through lane.
- Computer virus du jour: Messages carrying viruses masquerade as UPS delivery failure notifications.
- About some Chinese-made hair bands that were fashioned from recycled condoms.
- Luxury lock-up: Photographs purportedly show a new prison facility in Chicago, Illinois.
- Don't forget to visit our Daily Snopes page for a collection of odd news stories from around the world!
Worth a Second Look - Of fake children's letters supposedly revealing parental indiscretions.
Still Haunting the Inbox - Political rumors continue to swell around the two major-party presidential contenders, <NOBR>Barack Obama</NOBR> and <NOBR>John McCain</NOBR>.
- Computer virus warnings: Mail Server Report, Life Is Beautiful, Invitation (or Olympic Torch), Postcard (or Greeting Card) and UPS Delivery Failure.
- Videos purportedly show popcorn being popped with cellphones.
- Video clip shows the reunion of two men with Christian, a lion they had raised as a cub.
- Various rumors about the U.S. Social Security system.
- Appeals to find missing children: Ashley Flores, Reachelle Marie Smith, and Evan Trembley.
- Did ABC News report deliberately slanted presidential candidate preferences expressed by U.S. soldiers in Iraq?
- E-mail warns that cell phone numbers are being sold to telemarketers.
- Warnings about scammers' running up long-distance charges by asking victims to press <NOBR>#-9-0</NOBR> on their telephones or luring phone users into returning calls to numbers within the 809 area code.
- E-mail claims Rep. Nancy Pelosi has proposed a windfall profits tax on retirement income.
- Essay attributed to comedian Jay Leno urges Americans to focus on the positive.
- Controversy over a Pepsi soda can design and the Pledge of Allegiance.
- E-mail describes woman who evades a rapist posing as a policeman by calling #77 (or *677) on her cell phone.
- Environmental impact of drilling for oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Reserve (ANWR).
- E-mails urge Americans to buy/not buy gasoline from Citgo or Petro Express stations.
- Aspartame: Responsible for an epidemic of cancer, brain tumors, and multiple sclerosis, or not?
- Cindy McCain biography.
- Criticism of U.S. environmental regulations on the oil industry, supposedly penned by Bill Phillips.
- E-mail claims Bill Gates, Microsoft and AOL are giving away cash and merchandise to those who forward an e-mail message.
Fraud Afoot - Seems like everyone has become the recipient of mysterious <NOBR>e-mails</NOBR> promising untold wealth if only one helps a wealthy foreigner quietly move millions of dollars out of his country. The venerable <NOBR>419 Scam</NOBR> has discovered the goldmine that is the Internet. Beware: There's still no such thing as "something for nothing," and the contents of your bank account will end up with these wily foreigners if you fall in with this.
- Likewise, look out for mailings announcing you've won a foreign lottery you don't recall entering or claiming that because you share the surname of a wealthy person who died without leaving a will you're in line for a windfall inheritance.
- And be especially wary if, while trying to sell or rent anything online (car, boat, horse, motorcycle, painting, apartment, you name it) you're approached by a prospective buyer/renter who wants to pay with a cashier check made out for an amount in excess of the agreed-upon price and who asks the balance be sent to a third party.
- Aspiring work-at-homers promised big bucks for acting as intermediaries for international transactions wherein they cash checks for other parties or reship goods to them have been defrauded by con artists. Don't you be next.
- If someone calls to announce you've failed to appear for jury duty and will be arrested, do not give the caller your personal and financial information in an effort to prove he's sending the gendarmes after the wrong guy. You're being tricked into giving up this information to an identity thief.
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