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View Full Version : ever accidently email a whole list instead of just one person?


whiskeytown
10-15-2005, 06:30 AM
I have a friend who is going to be in Des Moines and I said I'd go catch his show next week - I also offered to get him stoned and offered him some words of comfort.

I hit reply and sent - and realized I posted to the whole email list and not just him -

so I may have suggested the first felony on the email list - LOL - I'm a moron.

RB

peachy
10-15-2005, 08:53 AM
hahaha what did u use to email him? how did u accidently do this??

diebitter
10-15-2005, 09:12 AM
I got included on one once, and it was a link to a video of some guy getting thrown, and ending with his head up a horses ass.

whiskeytown
10-15-2005, 09:15 AM
just hotmail -

he posted to the list, but instead of replying to him like I meant to, I replied to the whole list -

no biggie -

RB

Duke
10-15-2005, 11:31 AM
Here's a story I was not involved in, but got to laugh at nonetheless.

So it's college, and in one of the CS problem sets there's an error. So... we'll call him Jim... replies to the professor explaining the error and what the fix should be. The professor forwards this on to the whole class so as to benefit the less astute students.

Enter... we'll call him John... reads the forwarded message, doesn't realize that if you reply to a message it doesn't go to the guy that it was forwarded from, ends up replying to everyone who got a copy of the message as well as the sender (the professor), and says "Wipe that brown [censored] of your nose."

Now this professor was a sort of a machine when it came to e-mail. You could fire one off at 4 am and have a reply in 5 minutes. It's really amazing.

Without missing a beat, 5 minutes or so later John gets a reply from the prof:

"Please Clarify."

~D

Larimani
10-15-2005, 11:40 AM
I used to receive these forwarded chain emails from one of the girls who used in my school even after I graduated. I truely hated her and was getting annoyed to be receiving these stupid emails. So one day I hit the reply all button and wrote a nasty email telling her to shut the [censored] up and stop email me this crap. Needless to say the email contained many swear words. What I did not realise is that this stupid girl had also all the teachers from my old school and even the headmaster in her stupid mailing list.
The next day my inbox was filled with emails from outraged teachers.

Diplomat
10-15-2005, 11:44 AM
I just did this last week. A friend of mine who works at a large, downtown law firm that has a reputation for being somewhat...demanding of it's young lawyers.

Anyway he emailed one of the firms listserves and CC'ed a few other people (including me) to say that he couldn't be at work that evening because he has an urgent personal commitment. I emailed him back, saying something like: "LOL BS dude, you are going to a concert with me" and...CC'ed the firm listserve. Oops.

-Diplomat

Slow Play Ray
10-15-2005, 11:45 AM
No, but it reminded me of this:

When I was finishing grad school, I started applying for jobs. One of them was at Bose, and the hiring manager started off by sending me an email interview. Once I completed it, he wanted me to explain my master's thesis in more depth, so I did. Well apparently I explained it in too much depth, because I received an email back that said something to the effect of "Bill, this is a candidate for position xxxx. Could you please review his email and let me know if it makes sense? I can't help but feel he's just blowing smoke."

So now I'm sitting there, reading this email, thinking the guy I am trying to get a job with doesn't know the difference between "forward" and "reply." I was hoping maybe he wouldn't notice, but I soon got another email that was some sort of automated notice that he tried to have the email returned. So I had no choice but to write back to him and assure him I was NOT blowing smoke, that perhaps I went into too much detail in my reply, and I would be happy to sit down and explain it all to him in person.

He wrote back and invited me in for a real interview.

whiskeytown
10-15-2005, 12:07 PM
oh...that's cold.

at least I just hit my musician's list - If I offered to get a friend stoned and cc'd the CEO and company, oh, yes, very bad.

RB

manpower
10-15-2005, 12:18 PM
I used to manage a club email list in college. Occasionally someone would get tired of being on the list and instead of taking 2 seconds to figure out who to email to get off, would email all 150 of us. God did that piss me off...

HopeydaFish
10-15-2005, 01:25 PM
A guy at work did something along the same lines, only much more stupid. He was intending on forwarding an email that had been sent to him about something work-related. Instead, he somehow sent out an "automated response" from some On-line swingers site (Ashley Madison) saying that someone had sent his profile a private message. How he got the two emails confused is beyond me.

The best part was that the email contained a link that sent you directly onto the website and into his profile without having to enter a username or password. I didn't read any of his mail, or send out any messages...but I did take the time to switch his picture to this charming fellow:

http://ca.geocities.com/paul.hennessey@rogers.com/images/rogernew2.jpg

Oh, and added "scat-play" as one of his turn-ons.

lu_hawk
10-15-2005, 01:38 PM
A friend of mine had a co-worker who sent an e-mail making fun of the boss to a couple of his friends, only he accidentally sent it to the whole company.

PocketJokers72
10-15-2005, 02:50 PM
[ QUOTE ]
A guy at work did something along the same lines, only much more stupid. He was intending on forwarding an email that had been sent to him about something work-related. Instead, he somehow sent out an "automated response" from some On-line swingers site (Ashley Madison) saying that someone had sent his profile a private message. How he got the two emails confused is beyond me.

The best part was that the email contained a link that sent you directly onto the website and into his profile without having to enter a username or password. I didn't read any of his mail, or send out any messages...but I did take the time to switch his picture to this charming fellow:

http://ca.geocities.com/paul.hennessey@rogers.com/images/rogernew2.jpg

Oh, and added "scat-play" as one of his turn-ons.

[/ QUOTE ]


Flawless Victory.

Granite
10-15-2005, 07:55 PM
A friend of mine accidently sent his accountant porn. He had quite the mailing list and added him by mistake. The accountant wasn't amused. I was suprised he didn't thank him.

Same guy was quite the character. Woke up mid-flight from London to Australia having had a wet dream. Needless to say the poor woman next to him was horrified! Guess it beat the inflight movie.

Granite.

Matt Williams
10-15-2005, 08:02 PM
After the first WTC attack in 1993, my buddy and I would always predict how the next attack would be. He moved to California in the late 1990's and we kept in touch over email. Anyway, on 9/11, I left work early and came home. I opened my email and he had wrote something like "It's about time the terrorists learned how to do something right." Problem was, he sent it to everyone in his address book. Needless to say, a lot of people weren't too happy with him for a while.

miajag81
10-15-2005, 08:22 PM
[ QUOTE ]
After the first WTC attack in 1993, my buddy and I would always predict how the next attack would be. He moved to California in the late 1990's and we kept in touch over email. Anyway, on 9/11, I left work early and came home. I opened my email and he had wrote something like "It's about time the terrorists learned how to do something right." Problem was, he sent it to everyone in his address book. Needless to say, a lot of people weren't too happy with him for a while.

[/ QUOTE ]

wow

HopeydaFish
10-15-2005, 11:48 PM
[ QUOTE ]
After the first WTC attack in 1993, my buddy and I would always predict how the next attack would be. He moved to California in the late 1990's and we kept in touch over email. Anyway, on 9/11, I left work early and came home. I opened my email and he had wrote something like "It's about time the terrorists learned how to do something right." Problem was, he sent it to everyone in his address book. Needless to say, a lot of people weren't too happy with him for a while.

[/ QUOTE ]

I remember how I felt after 9/11, and I definitely would have stopped being friends with a guy like this -- at the very least.

Matt Williams
10-16-2005, 12:02 AM
[ QUOTE ]
[ QUOTE ]
After the first WTC attack in 1993, my buddy and I would always predict how the next attack would be. He moved to California in the late 1990's and we kept in touch over email. Anyway, on 9/11, I left work early and came home. I opened my email and he had wrote something like "It's about time the terrorists learned how to do something right." Problem was, he sent it to everyone in his address book. Needless to say, a lot of people weren't too happy with him for a while.

[/ QUOTE ]

I remember how I felt after 9/11, and I definitely would have stopped being friends with a guy like this -- at the very least.

[/ QUOTE ]

Sure absolutely. But the message was really meant just for me and I knew he meant no harm when he said it.