"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
Interesting one. Usually they want you to deliver shirts accepting their credit card. Then the shirts are gone when the card bounces.This one seems to say they will deliver the substrate to you. I suppose you could go along with the ploy, broken engrish (lol) and all. You could burn the one screen supposedly needed. Then after the shirt delivery arrives (probably from another printer scammed on the raw shirts), hold the printing until you run the charge and it clears (maybe even check the bank). Then, since you have an auto, knock out the 420 pieces in no time. Nothing in the requested information carries any financial risk. This one is a bit different. I probably missed something along the way.
Quote from: screenxpress on June 12, 2013, 12:38:25 AMInteresting one. Usually they want you to deliver shirts accepting their credit card. Then the shirts are gone when the card bounces.This one seems to say they will deliver the substrate to you. I suppose you could go along with the ploy, broken engrish (lol) and all. You could burn the one screen supposedly needed. Then after the shirt delivery arrives (probably from another printer scammed on the raw shirts), hold the printing until you run the charge and it clears (maybe even check the bank). Then, since you have an auto, knock out the 420 pieces in no time. Nothing in the requested information carries any financial risk. This one is a bit different. I probably missed something along the way.From what I've read, the chargeback comes weeks later, and it's in the terms of service of most merchant accounts that you have to pay it. The regards thing is pretty funny. Perhaps you should try replying--"In regards to your regards in closing, what exactly were you implying?" If they can translate that, you gotta give them some regard.
I believe initially it was a scam to increase traffic on phone relay systems in Nigeria, and quickly evolved to include the kidnapping, inheritance, and textile industries.