A
female
age
51-59,
anonymous
writes: Who would be the type of person you would send a text to starting with the words 'Hello my friend'. Would you send it to an old friend, a general acquaintance, a customer or another person.
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female
reader, Honeypie +, writes (28 November 2018):
Ah thanks for the follow up :)
CONTEXT is everything!
He was probably just being polite in this case.
A
female
reader, anonymous, writes (28 November 2018): After reading the replies I realise I should have elaborated a bit more. The message was sent to me by a male who had just repaired something on my car and I had asked for his mobile number for my friend so he could help them as well.
Hopefully that puts it in a better context, I don't know.
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A
reader, anonymous, writes (28 November 2018): If you don't know the origin; or it came from an unidentified source. Delete it, and block the number.
If the sender didn't identify themselves; I'd say it was a certified creep. How the hell are you supposed to know who it is? If both the number and caller are undisclosed, it's best not to respond to it. Treat it like a scam-caller.
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A
female
reader, Honeypie +, writes (26 November 2018):
Sounds like something a Nigerian scammer would open up with.
Sorry, but that was my first thought.
It doesn't sound like it's a friend or a person who's first language is English. Which is why... I say scammer introduction.
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A
male
reader, kenny +, writes (26 November 2018):
Personally i would not really use this terminology. But i guess you could send it to various people really, maybe a old friend that you have not seen in years. Maybe someone you worked with for years but is now retired.
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