Everything is good for something, including SPAM. According to this article.

A spam message wishing a Russian woman happy new year may very well have killed her and saved hundreds of intended targets, according to an account by The Telegraph’s Moscow correspondent, Andrew Osborn.

The woman, dubbed “The Black Widow,” who Russian authorities suspect was part of the same militant group that killed 35 people at Moscow’s Domodedovo airport on Monday, was at a house preparing for the attack, which would have occurred on New Year’s Eve at Red Square. Instead, the woman’s mobile phone, which served as the device’s detonator, was activated hours early by a spam message wishing her a happy new year. She was killed, while a man and woman suspected of being accomplices escaped from the house.

Russian security forces told The Telegraph that phones are usually kept off until the last minute for detonation, but in this case, “the terrorists were careless.”




  1. sargasso_c says:

    Slow irony day.

  2. greyangel says:

    Thats the story and their sticking to it…

  3. Animby - just phoning it in says:

    Not spam. A legitimate message from her mobile service. What’s that called? Bacon?

  4. deowll says:

    A season’s greeting from you phone company is not spam.

    I call it very good luck; a gift from the fates; divine intervention; etc.

  5. msbpodcast says:

    Can you just take it to the limit already and have people flying naked?

    Meanwhile, if you own the plane, you walk right on with a bother.

    Sort of like when the heads of GM, Chrysler and Ford come to Washington to demand money… Bet you they didn’t have to go through security.

  6. msbpodcast says:

    The Russian suicide bombers aren’t very sophisticated.

    Most airports have WiFi so the bomb could have been hooked up to a micro-controller wired up to a 9 volt battery and a pound or two of C4 wrapped with non-plate glass, placed in anyone’s carry-on and set up to wait for a very specific message.

  7. So what says:

    Darwin Rules!!

  8. Mr, Ed says:

    #4 – Sorry, Pedro. That’s scrapple.

  9. Steve says:

    Maybe the TSA should send a message to every phone at a random time each day. The message could be a paid advertisement. This would save lives and fill the trough. WIN!

  10. Dallas says:

    Pedro, what’s your cellphone number?

  11. MikeN says:

    Normally we want the terrorists to kill the spammers.

  12. Dallas says:

    #13
    If you don’t have cellphones in your village, that is understandable.

  13. dexton7 says:

    Spam kills!


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