> I agree, but that's kinda the point. They don't want to waste time with
> people who know it's a scam.
Sorry I don't see what they gain or how it benefits them by putting
mistakes in the email. If a group of people only know it's a scam
because of mistakes written in the text of the email, then they'd be
better off not putting in those mistakes and having those people click
the link to get whatever malware/spyware.
Unless they are assuming that group of people are much more likely to be
running a machine without security holes and the cost of the bandwidth
to try and install the malware outweighs any benefit they might get.
Seems unlikely as they are probably using some stolen web server to host
the files.
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