The Photo in the Background is from the recent WSEAS Conference in the West University of Timisoara

Bogus publishing company asked me a paper.

 Dear Professor Nikos E Mastorakis,

I would like to thank you very much for warning us about this annoying situation. I think that it is really scaring what it happens in this world because of unethical persons who try to steal papers from authors (that they consider as naive) for their bogus journals. You are perfectly right in being angry, since over time you had a generous and towering academic attitude, and you don't deserve to be cheated by persons like the authors of that revolting email.

I am deeply grateful for your brilliant lesson, and I will be very careful with the received messages, trying to avoid in replying such fake messages.

My Faithful Regards,
Aida

Aida Bulucea
Faculty of Electrical Engineering, University of Craiova
Romania


2012/5/17 WSEAS. Research Department <mastor@wseas.org>
Bogus, fraud, scam publishing company asked me a paper.

See the email below. They browse the data base of WSEAS and they collect the emails and the names of the authors for sending bogus invitations for their bogus journal (fraud, scam). This is unacceptable. WSEAS left the data base WSEAS-E_Library open for all the academic community but not for this purposes. Please, avoid sending papers to fake journals (bogus publishers,big scam and big fraud). This is the email that I received:
In my opinion this bogus publisher misuses the WSEAS E_library for creating fake conferences and fake journals. Their Spam is too annoying. I received 4 junk emails from these junk publishers to all my @wseas accounts today.... Note that nobody signs this email! Quite interesting. We do not report the name and the web address of this scam publisher as an attempt not to advertize this fraud.

This is from the editorial board office of Journal of Modern Mathematics Frontier (JMMF). It’s my honor to contact you.
We searched a paper of yours published in the :WSEAS Transactions on Mathematics

Title: On the solution of p-Laplacian for non-Newtonian fluid flow
Authors: Mastorakis, N.E.

To promote the development and communication of modern mathematics, we cordially invite you to submit new papers in this area to our journal.
If accepted, your paper will be published with registration discount.

If you are interested in it, please submit your manuscript online before June. 18, 2012:
http://www.sjmmf.org/papersubmission.aspx

For more information:
1) Please visit: www.sjmmf.org
2) Or you could contact us via e-mail: jmmf@academicpub.org

Best regards,
Editorial Board Office

This was the SCAM, the FRAUD journal's email 

WSEAS

http://www.scimagojr.com/journalsearch.php?q=1900147401&tip=sid

 

WSEAS Transactions on Communications

CountryGreece

Subject AreaEngineering

Subject CategoryElectrical and Electronic Engineering 

PublisherWorld Scientific and Engineering Academy and Society (WSEAS) PressPublication type: Journals. ISSN: 11092742

Coverage: 2005-2011

H Index: 7

Scope:

Microwave Theory and techniques 
CAD design for Microwave Systems, Antennas and Radars 
Lightwave technology 
Submillimeter-Wave techniques 
Microwave High-Power techniques 
Microwave and millimeter-Wave Integrated Circuits 
Microwave and millimeter-Wave Integrated Solid State Devices 
Microwave Acoustics 
Filter and Passive Components 
Microwave and Antennas Measurements 
Microwave Superconductivity 
RFIC"s 
Wave-guides, Microwave propagation 
Ferrites devices. Cavities. Microwave Circuits 
Periodic Structures and Filters 
Tubes, Masers, Amplifiers 
HF-VHF-UHF Engineering 
Antennas 
Reflectors and Lens Antennas 
Arrays 
Scattering 
Propagation 
Diffraction, etc.


 

PLENARY SPEAKER in WSEAS Conferences

PLENARY SPEAKER in WSEAS Conferences

New Prospective WSEAS Plenary Speakers must send their CV to mastor@wseas.org , evaluation@wseas.org

plus

-The subconference to which you believe your lecture fits
-Your complete affiliation
-The Title & Abstract of your presentation
-A brief biography of yours, in the form of 1-2 paragraphs
-A photograph of yours, preferably portrait.

EXAMPLE: See http://www.wseas.us/conferences/2010/cambridge/pharmacology/Plenary7.htm  for an example.

until Nov. 30 , 2012

In case of acceptance, Plenary Speakers will benefit of a free registration / participation to the conference
and the right to publish as many as 3 Papers free of charge in the conference proceedings.
Note that your name must be included in the authors of the paper(s) and that
the benefits apply only to you and not your co-authors. All papers will need to be presented during the conference.

Statistics for the WSEAS Journals:
By comparing http://wseas-cscc.blogspot.com  (Abstracts of all the papers) with the: http://www.worldses.org/journals/index.html  (Full paper of the accepted papers): 1 ACCEPTED paper for every 10 SUBMITTED papers in WSEAS Transactions
In the web page: http://wseas-cscc.blogspot.com
we have posted the Abstracts of all the papers submitted in WSEAS Transactions.

VOTE: We have received new proposals for conferences (in collaboration with several universities)


We have received new proposals for conferences (in collaboration with several universities) in the following towns




for  2012 and 2013. You can vote 1, 2, 3 or 4 towns (maximum).

Please, vote and select the best towns for  2012 and 2013.







Some towns also has been added after your comments in our last post
http://japansupport.blogspot.com/2011/04/vote-what-is-most-appropriate-town-for.html


Leave also your comments below

Vote, what is the most appropriate town for you for the WSEAS Conferences of May 14-16, 2012 and for the WSEAS Conferences of August 21-23, 2012.

The WSEAS Multiconference in Japan has been postponed due to the great natural disaster that attacked the country.

Vote, what is the most appropriate town for you for the WSEAS Conferences of May 14-16, 2012 instead of Iwate (Japan).

Also, vote now for the WSEAS conferences of August 21-23 of 2012, because for AUGUST 2012 we have received several different proposals also.
We remind that we vote "town" (before voting for a specific town, learn about via internet, for instance by Google)


Please, vote in the right column of this site.

If you want you can justify your vote by leaving a comment below

Thanks

The Organizers

how to donate to the victims?

The best and safest way to donate money to Victims of Tsunami in Japan  is to contact directly the Japanese Embassy in your country or the Embassy of your Country in Japan. They will lead you and you will avoid unpleasant situations (we have heard that there exist scam internet messages and strange organizations that ... "collect money" to support the victims)

Japan Tsunami photo's

Leave your message of support here

Pray for Japan !! for 1st time in history EARTH QUAKE., TSUNAMI., NUCLEAR RADIATIONS.. 3 major disasters on tym attacking a small nation !!

Japan Tsunami photo's

Massive earthquake hits Japan

An 8.9-magnitude earthquake hit off the east coast of Japan. The quake one of the largest in recorded history triggered a 33-foot tsunami that battered Japan's coast, killing hundreds and sweeping away cars, homes, buildings, and boats. Editors note: we'll post more as the story develops. 

 1.Houses swallowed by tsunami waves burn in Sendai, Miyagi Prefecture (state) after Japan was struck by a strong earthquake off its northeastern coast Friday, March 11. (Kyodo News/Associated Press) 

2
A tsumani triggered by a powerful earthquake makes its way to sweep part of Sendai airport in northern Japan on Friday March 11, 2011. The magnitude 8.9 earthquake slammed Japan's eastern coast Friday, unleashing a 13-foot (4-meter) tsunami that swept boats, cars, buildings and tons of debris miles inland. (Kyodo News/Associated Press)

3
Sendai Airport is surrounded by waters in Miyagi prefecture (state), Japan, after a ferocious tsunami spawned by one of the largest earthquakes ever recorded slammed Japan's eastern coast Friday, March 11, 2011. (Kyodo News/Associated Press)

4
Evacuees stand around Shinjuku Central Park in Tokyo Japan March 11, 2011. A massive 8.9 magnitude quake hit northeast Japan on Friday, causing many injuries, fires and a ten-metre (33-ft) tsunami along parts of the country's coastline. A tsunami warning has been issued for the entire Pacific basin except for the mainland United States and Canada following a huge earthquake that hit Japan on Friday, the Pacific (Reuters)

5
Light planes and vehicles sit among the debris after they were swept by a tsumani that struck Sendai airport in northern Japan. (Kyodo News/Associated Press)

6
Houses are swept by a tsunami in Natori City in northeastern Japan March 11, 2011. A massive 8.9 magnitude quake hit northeast Japan on Friday, causing many injuries, fires and a ten-metre (33-ft) tsunami along parts of the country's coastline. There were several strong aftershocks and a warning of a 10-metre tsunami following the quake, which also caused buildings to shake violently in the capital Tokyo. (Reuters) # 

7
A massive tsunami sweeps in to engulf a residential area after a powerful earthquake in Natori, Miyagi Prefecture in northeastern Japan. (Reuters) # 

8
Reporters at the Associated Press Tokyo Bureau in Tokyo take shelter under a table while a strong earthquake strikes eastern Japan. (Itsuo Inouye/Assoctiated Press) #

9
People take shelter as a ceiling collapses in a bookstore during an earthquake in Sendai, northeastern Japan March 11. (Reuters) #

   
10
Tsunami swirls near a port in Oarai, Ibaraki Prefecture (state) after Japan was struck by a strong earthquake off its northeastern coast Friday, March 11. (Kyodo News/Associated Press) #


11
Seismologists pose for the media as they display a seismographic graph showing the magnitude of the earthquake in Japan, on a monitor at the British Geological Survey office in Edinburgh, Scotland March 11, 2011. The biggest earthquake on record to hit Japan struck the northeast coast on Friday, triggering a 10-metre tsunami that swept away everything in its path, including houses, ships, cars and farm buildings. (David Moir/Reuters) #


12
An energy map provided by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) shows the intensity of the tsunami caused by the magnitude 8.9 earthquake which struck Japan on March 11, 2011. A tsunami warning has been issued for the entire Pacific basin except mainland United States and Canada following a huge earthquake that hit Japan on Friday, the U.S. Pacific Tsunami Warning Center said. The warning includes Hawaii and extends from Mexico down to South American countries on the Pacific, the center said. (NOAA/Tsunami Warning Center/)#  


13
This National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Global bathymetry map image released on March 11, 2011 shows features of the ocean floor depth (or bathymetry) from a NOAA ETOPO-1 dataset. The image shows the entire Western Pacific basin. Notice how abruptly the Japanese islands rise out of the ocean. Other coastal Asian areas have much more gradual slopes. The islands and mountain ranges throughout the ocean, visible in this imagery, also affect the tsunami travel time and speed. In the open ocean, tsunamis can travel at speeds up to 500 mph (800 kph). This momentum is what creates such a destructive force as the wave moves inland. Tsunami waves rolled thousands of miles across the Pacific Ocean after a massive earthquake off Japan and washed ashore in Hawaii early March 11, 2011, but the tourist hotspot appeared to escape major damage. As sirens blared and Hawaiian authorities rapidly evacuated low-lying areas, the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center reported wave changes at Waianae Harbor at around 3:24 a.m. (NOAA/handout)# 


14
A building is in flames near Sendai airport, Miyagi prefecture (state), Japan, after a powerful earthquake, the largest in Japan's recorded history, slammed the eastern coasts Friday, March 11. (Kyodo News/Associated Press) # 


15
A helmeted man walks past the rubbles and a burning building after a powerful earthquake, the largest in Japan's recorded history, slammed the eastern coasts in Iwaki city, Fukushima prefecture, Japan. (Kyodo News/Associated Press) # 


 
16
Giant fireballs rise from a burning oil refinery in Ichihara, Chiba Prefecture (state) after Japan was struck by a strong earthquake off its northeastern coast. (Kyodo News/Associated Press) #

 
17
An oncoming tsunami strikes the coast in Natori City, Miyagi Prefecture, northeastern Japan March 11, 2011. The biggest earthquake to hit Japan in 140 years struck the northeast coast on Friday, triggering a 10-metre tsunami that swept away everything in its path, including houses, cars and farm buildings on fire. (Reuters) #

 
18
Earthquake-triggered tsumanis sweep shores along Iwanuma in northern Japan. (Kyodo News/Associated Press) #


19
Fishing boats and vehicles are carried by a tsunami wave at Onahama port in Iwaki city, in Fukushima prefecture, northern Japan. (Fukushima Minpo/AFP/Getty Images) # 

 
20
A tsunami, tidal wave smashes vehicles and houses at Kesennuma city in Miyagi prefecture, northern Japan. (AFP/Getty Images) #


21
Japan's Prime Minister Naoto Kan (center) reacts he he feels an earthquake as he attends a committee meeting in the upper house of parliament in Tokyo March 11. A massive 8.8 magnitude quake hit the northeast coast of Japan on Friday, shaking buildings in the capital Tokyo, causing "many injuries", at least one fire and triggering a four-metre (13-ft) tsunami, NHK television and witnesses reported. (Toro Hanai/Reuters) #

 
22
The owner of a ceramic shop checks his damaged wares following the massive 8.9-magnitude earthquake in Tokyo. (Yoshikazu Tsuno AFP/Getty Images) #

 
23
Broken windows of a building are seen after an earthquake in Tokyo , March 11, 2011. A massive 8.9 magnitude quake hit northeast Japan on Friday, causing many injuries, fires and a ten-metre (33-ft) tsunami along parts of the country's coastline. (Reuters) #

 
24
Rescue workers hurry to a building following reports of injuries in Tokyo's financial district after an earthquake hit off the coast of northern Japan. There were several strong aftershocks and a warning of a 10-metre tsunami following the quake, which also caused buildings to shake violently in the capital Tokyo. (Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters) #


25
An aerial shot shows vehicles ready for shipping being carried by a tsunami tidal wave at Hitachinaka city in Ibaraki prefecture on March 11, 2011. A massive 8.8-magnitude earthquake shook Japan, unleashing a powerful tsunami that sent ships crashing into the shore and carried cars through the streets of coastal towns. (AFP/Getty Images) #

 
26
This aerial shot shows the tsunami tidal waves moving upstream (left side) in the Naka river at Hitachinaka city in Ibaraki prefecture on March 11. (AFP/Getty Images) #


27
Houses, cars and other debris are washed away by tsunami tidal waves in Kesennuma in Miyagi Prefecture, northern Japan, after strong earthquakes hit the area Friday, March 11. (Keichi Nakane/Associated Press/The Yomiuri Shimbun) #


28
Houses swept by a tsunami smoulder near Sendai Airport. (Reuters) #




29
Stranded commuters wrap themselves in blankets bracing for chilly evening at a park in Yokohama, near Tokyo, following a strong earthquake hit eastern Japan on Friday, March 11. (Shuji Kajiyama/Associated Press) #

 
30
A woman checks a map to find a route as she takes a rest at a hotel lobby after subway and train services were suspended after an earthquake, in Tokyo. (Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters) #

 
31
Evacuees wait in an evacuation area following an earthquake in Tokyo, Japan, on Friday, March 11, 2011. Japan was struck by its strongest earthquake on record, an 8.9-magnitude temblor that shook buildings across Tokyo and unleashed a seven-meter-high tsunami that killed hundreds as it engulfed towns on the northern coast. (Haruyoshi Yamaguchi/Bloomberg) #


32
A man looks for supplies in a store in Tokyo that has almost sold out of food and drink as people are unable to return home after an earthquake March 11. (Yuriko Nakao/Reuters) #


33
Hotel employees squat down in horror at the hotel's entrance in Tokyo after a strong earthquake hit Japan. (Itsuo Inouye/Associated Press) # 


34
Stranded commuters watch a TV news on a powerful earthquake at Tokyo railway station as train services are suspended in Tokyo. (Hiro Komae/Associated Press) #


35
Residents check the damaged done on a road a house in Sukagawa city, Fukushima prefecture, in northern Japan. (Fukushima Minpo/AFP/Getty Images) #


36
Workers inspect a caved-in section of a prefectural road in Satte, Saitama Prefecture, after one of the largest earthquakes ever recorded in Japan slammed its eastern coast March 11. (Saitama Shimbun/Associated Press/Kyodo News) #


37
A station staff directs passengers at Tokyo's Shinagawa train station after a magnitude 8.9 earthquake slammed Japan's eastern coast. (Hiro Komae/Associated Press) #


38
Police place roadside flares along the highway on March 11 in Honolulu, Hawaii. An earthquake measuring 8.9 on the Richter scale has hit the northeast coast of Japan causing tsunami alerts throughout the Pacific Ocean. Thousands along the coast are evacuating their homes in Hawaii as the state prepares for tsunami waves. (Lucy Pemoni/Getty Images) #


39
Puipui Faletoi, of Moiliili, Oahu, background center, rests in his vehicle with his sons Daniel, left, and Fletcher Faletoi in the parking lot of Manoa District Park in Oahu, Hawaii. The site is a volunteer staging area which could turn into a Red Cross shelter if a tsunami arrives. The Faletoi family plan to take shelter here. (Rebecca Breyer/Associated Press)#


40
Students hold candles as they pray for Japan's earthquake victims inside their school in the western Indian city of Ahmedabad March 11. (Amit Dave/Reuters) #


41
A pedestrian road collapsed in the massive 8.9-magnitude earthquake in Urayasu city, Chiba prefecture on March 11. (Toshifumi Kitamura/AFP/Getty Images) #


42
A man sits wrapped in a blanket after he was evacuated from a building in Tokyo's financial district, after an earthquake off the coast of northern Japan, March 11. (Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters) #

   


'if we want to receive, we need to learn to give first. Maybe we will end with our hands empty, but out heart will be filled with love' - Steven Covey

best regards
--Vikaschandra Chinthala

__,_._,___



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