(dawt.CAWN ar.tist)
n.
A person who runs an Internet-based scam or fraud. Also: dot-con artist, dot.com artist.
Example Citation:
"This collaboration with law enforcement agencies, industry and consumers will create a climate where e-commerce can be conducted with confidence," said the FTC's Bernstein. "We want the dot con artists to know that we're building a consumer protection coalition that spans the globe."
— Christine Winter, "U.S. Takes Aim at Fraud," Sun-Sentinel, November 1, 2000
Earliest Citation:
Anticybersquatting Consumer Protection Act ... urbs poaching of trademarked names for Internet addresses and imposes $100,000 fine on "dot-con artists" who profiteer.
— Elizabeth Wasserman, "Score Another Round for the Internet Industry," The Industry Standard, December 6, 1999
Notes:
This phrase combines dot com with con artist, short for confidence artist (or confidence man), a person who runs a confidence game where the victim is defrauded after his or her confidence has been won. The frauds perpetrated by don con artists are called dot cons. Here's a slightly earlier citation that uses includes a dot for some reason:
— Matthew Benjamin, "Targeting Dot.Con Artists," Investor's Business Daily, August 11, 1999
Related Words:
Categories:
New words. 2013.