Teachers and staff across the San Francisco Unified School District recently got a surprising email containing a mysterious message in their inboxes: go ahead and click the link. What was unusual was that this strange email reached the inboxes of nearly 6,000 educators, including teachers and teacher’s aides. At first glance, the messages closely resemble a classic internet scam, promising free money out of nowhere and ending with a link to a $250 digital gift card.People were a little skeptical because of digital frauds, so district officials quickly stepped in to verify that the email is entirely legitimate, according to a report by San Francisco Chronicle. The email said: OPEN the link. REDEEM the gift card. SPEND the money on anything you want. It was later found that an anonymous local tech worker has donated a staggering $1.6 million to the district's nonprofit foundation, SPARK SF Public Schools. After accounting for minor administrative distribution expenses, the massive sum is being split equally among the educators, giving everyone exactly $250 to spend on absolutely anything they want.‘My salary is more than the budget of many schools’The anonymous donor, who has a background in the tech industry, gave an interview explaining the motivation behind the massive surprise gift. The donor also admitted to grappling with the vast economic divide between Silicon Valley tech workers and public school educators.“I’m kind of aware of how hard it is to be a teacher. Hopefully they will feel seen and appreciated. That’s my goal here,” the donor was quoted as saying.“My salary is more than the budget of many schools. I think that says a lot about our society that we compensate [a tech worker] in orders of magnitude higher than the highest-paid teacher,” the tech worker added. The donor noted that the $1.6 million gift represents roughly 5% of their family's total net worth.“Our society tells me all this is mine. I deserve this. I can’t hold that with a straight face for a moment. What do I need? I need enough to eat and one day send kids to college. Everything beyond that? My goal is to give away in the next 10 to 20 years,” the donor added.