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News This Smells Bad…

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AgentPete

Capo Famiglia
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May 19, 2014
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I’ve received several emails in recent days, all structured as the one below, received this morning. While I can’t tell you exactly what sort of scam this is – it’s got “scam” written all over it. My thoughts follow.

Hi there,
I'm Leïla Slimani, a suspense and legal thriller author with a background in law and journalism. Over the years, I’ve written over seventy novels, many of which follow the courtroom drama and high-stakes legal battles of defense attorney Paul Madriani.
Here’s a link to one of my books on Amazon:
📘 The Perfect Nanny : Amazon.com
And here’s my Amazon Author Page:
🔗 Leïla Slimani: books, biography, latest update
I’d really love to hear more about your writing journey and the stories you’ve brought to life. If you’re open to sharing, I’d be glad to check out your work, feel free to send over your book link, website, Goodreads, or Amazon page.
Looking forward to connecting!
Warm regards,
Leïla Slimani


OK, so now an analysis of what smells bad…

1. The real Leïla Slimani is the first Moroccan woman to win France’s most prestigious literary prize, the Prix Goncourt. I don’t think she’d be firing off random emails like this!

2. Claims to have written the Paul Madriani legal thrillers. Nope, they were actually written by Steve Martini, a few seconds on Amazon would tell you that.

3. Classic mass-mail shakedown bullshit (sorry, but I’m annoyed!) phrases such as “I’d love to hear about your writing journey.” This is designed to get a response from you, without any effort on their side.

I don’t know specifically what the scam is at this stage, but the aim of these emails is to get you into an email exchange, to get you emotionally invested and to warm you up for the kill…. A vanity press publishing package maybe, or just good old malware.

Whatever the killshot is, the cruddy invertebrates behind scams like these fully realize just how vulnerable authors can be to this kind of pitch. Don’t fall for it!
 
Thanks, John. I’ve tracked the issue down to those emojis in the scam message, the forum database wasn’t comfortable with them. Now updating the character set on the server, shouldn’t happen again after that.
 
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"I've written over seventy novels" was the place I'd hit delete. If you've written that many novels, and I've never heard of you, and you've no awards to show for it, then you're either a shitty bot, or a shitty writer. It makes them sound like a dumb scammer. I mean 20 novels would be a more believable sell.

If we were going to use AI for good, the programmers of AI would target all the scammers and fry their computers and phones and any devise they ever tried to use. For the rest of time.

I think we should call scammers scummers... scum of the earth.
 
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I’ve received several emails in recent days, all structured as the one below, received this morning. While I can’t tell you exactly what sort of scam this is – it’s got “scam” written all over it. My thoughts follow.




OK, so now an analysis of what smells bad…

1. The real Leïla Slimani is the first Moroccan woman to win France’s most prestigious literary prize, the Prix Goncourt. I don’t think she’d be firing off random emails like this!

2. Claims to have written the Paul Madriani legal thrillers. Nope, they were actually written by Steve Martini, a few seconds on Amazon would tell you that.

3. Classic mass-mail shakedown bullshit (sorry, but I’m annoyed!) phrases such as “I’d love to hear about your writing journey.” This is designed to get a response from you, without any effort on their side.

I don’t know specifically what the scam is at this stage, but the aim of these emails is to get you into an email exchange, to get you emotionally invested and to warm you up for the kill…. A vanity press publishing package maybe, or just good old malware.

Whatever the killshot is, the cruddy invertebrates behind scams like these fully realize just how vulnerable authors can be to this kind of pitch. Don’t fall for it!
Yes. I'm getting more and more of these types of emails and they all want $$ for promotion for old books. Here's one from yesterday: (What the hell does that first sentence even mean?).

Hi James,
I’ve been thinking about My War with Hemingway since I last wrote Zach’s war within, the haunting presence of Hemingway, and the quiet persistence of love in the middle of unraveling. This isn’t just a novel; it’s a mirror for the men and families still living in the aftermath of their own battles.
When I reached out, I suggested two ways to help your story reach the people who need it most:
1. Audiobook promotion placing Zach’s voice in the ears of veterans, trauma survivors, and recovery communities who may never pick up a book but will listen if it’s put in front of them in the right way.
2. A cinematic book trailer a 60–90 second visual that carries the gravity and hope of your story into spaces where it can open hearts before a single page is read.
Neither of these are about hype. They’re about placement making sure this book gets where it can do the most good. Even one small step now could start that ripple.
If you’d like, I can prepare a simple, flexible plan showing exactly how these could roll out with timing, budget, and deliverables so you have complete clarity. Would you like me to send that over?

With care and respect,

Savannah Rose Whitaker
 
Yes. I'm getting more and more of these types of emails and they all want $$ for promotion for old books. Here's one from yesterday: (What the hell does that first sentence even mean?).

Hi James,
I’ve been thinking about My War with Hemingway since I last wrote Zach’s war within, the haunting presence of Hemingway, and the quiet persistence of love in the middle of unraveling. This isn’t just a novel; it’s a mirror for the men and families still living in the aftermath of their own battles.
When I reached out, I suggested two ways to help your story reach the people who need it most:
1. Audiobook promotion placing Zach’s voice in the ears of veterans, trauma survivors, and recovery communities who may never pick up a book but will listen if it’s put in front of them in the right way.
2. A cinematic book trailer a 60–90 second visual that carries the gravity and hope of your story into spaces where it can open hearts before a single page is read.
Neither of these are about hype. They’re about placement making sure this book gets where it can do the most good. Even one small step now could start that ripple.
If you’d like, I can prepare a simple, flexible plan showing exactly how these could roll out with timing, budget, and deliverables so you have complete clarity. Would you like me to send that over?

With care and respect,

Savannah Rose Whitaker
Savannah Rose Whitaker... I've got emails from her in my trash bin as well.
Lol
 
"I've written over seventy novels" was the place I'd hit delete.
I received a previous one on behalf of a client that didn’t make such an outrageous claim, and for a moment it gave me pause for thought… writers do sometimes reach out to other writers, after all.

Lyse is right, we haven't even started to feel the impact of AI on scams and their victims. That phone call at 3am from your kid who needs money for a ride home…? It will happen, and worse.
 
1. Audiobook promotion
OK, so that’s the eventual pitch, thanks James, I was wondering how they monetised it.
If you’d like, I can prepare a simple, flexible plan
This whole email has got ChatGPT written all over it. I bet they’re using the API to customize each individual scammy email.
 
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I've long had a policy of deleting every email that isn't from someone I know (in my personal account. Somehow my writing account is still clean, and my work account is work is full of unsolicited stuff, but it's work).
I feel good about this policy given this scam.
Using AI to find and distill our works to a two sentence reviews, then craft the scam email and send is a matter of seconds, isn't it?
 
Exactly.
There's a proposal to charge about a cent per email sent (by everyone) on the basis that this would make scam emails uneconomic.
Similarly, if ChatGPT et al were to charge realistic amounts for their services, this might deter scammers too (or just make them hack other people's accounts, I suppose).
 

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