Mary Yugo <maryyu...@gmail.com> wrote: > > That Rossi provides an order blank is in no way any evidence that he has > ever taken an order, accepted money for a device, actually delivered a > device or that filling in the order will get you anything more than not > doing so.
How could an order form do this? Here is an order form for voice input software: https://shop.nuance.com/store?Action=DisplayPage&Locale=en_US&SiteID=nuanceus&id=QuickBuyCartPage Do you see any proof here that Nuance has taken an order or delivered a product? > Order forms are common among scammers. Order forms are universal among legitimate corporations. *Every single company* has order forms. You seem to have some difficulty with logic. Take an attribute X which is universally found in Group A, and sometimes found in Group B. You see attribute X. You jump to the conclusion we are looking at Group B when it is just as likely -- or perhaps more likely -- we are looking at Group A. The attributes you ascribe to scammers are equally likely to be found in legitimate companies. They all have web pages. Many legitimate companies have ugly web pages based on obsolete software. They all keep secrets; McDonald's is a legitimate company and they originated the term "secret sauce." Legitimate companies and scammers alile seldom tell the public who their customers are. They all have business strategies. Many have bad strategies. Not one of them asks you, Mary Yugo, to approve of their strategies. - Jed