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- - - - - - - - - - - - Editors' Note: This story contains errors that are corrected in a "Note from the Editors" published on July 12, 2001 here. By Damien CaveJune 19, 2001 | Most experienced Net users filter forwarded e-mails according to at least one simple rule: Sad stories probably aren't true, and really sad stories that ask for donations aren't just false, they're probably scams or viruses. Last month, online friends of 19-year old leukemia patient "Kaycee Nicole" were crushed to discover that the plucky teenager they'd been sending Beanie Babies and Amazon gift certificates to for a year was actually a healthy woman named Debbie Swenson. Swenson wasn't asking for donations, but her fictional accounts of a bout with cancer earned "Kaycee" hundreds of devoted fans around the world. The Kaycee Hoax, as it's now known, confirmed the need for suspicion on the Web, but it also points to more general questions. Is there room on the Web for pleas from people who actually need help? Keith Dawson, founding author of the 6-year-old newsletter Tasty Bits from the Technology Front, thinks so. He's just launched a not-for-profit corporation called Friend Indeed, which aims "to collect and distribute donations that enable the lives of worthy people."
"I have some reputation capital banked," says Dawson, whose weblog has earned several honors, including, most recently, a listing in Forbes' "Best of the Web 2000" feature. "This is the best way to spend it." The Friend Indeed program is meant to ensure that well-meaning Netizens don't get scammed again, Dawson writes in an e-mail that is currently circulating.
On April 4, Blake turned to the Net for help. She decided to go "outside the system," posting her story in an online forum and e-mailing everyone she knew. Dawson was on the list. She'd been one of his "irregulars" -- people who occasionally tip him off to technology news -- and since he'd known Blake for about three years, the plea carried credence. She seemed like the perfect first candidate.
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