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Twitter Scams

Wednesday Jul 29 2009

Beware the latest form of employment scams: Twitter-style. Con artists are now using the popular micro-blogging site Twitter to lure people desperate for work into work-at-home schemes. Many of these schemes used to focus on making money by sending emails or by placing Google ads. The latest variation is a promise to make money working at home on Twitter. Companies like Easytweetprofits.com and make-money-on-twitter.com (associated with TwitterProfitHouse.com) promise from $250 a day to $5000 a month for posting links to Twitter. If you're interested, you supposedly only have to pay a few dollars for a 7-day trial instructional CD. However, buried in the terms and conditions of the contract is a clause stating that if you don't cancel the contract, you will be charged a monthly amount on an ongoing basis (such as $47 or $99). And your trial period starts from the day you ORDER the CD (not when you receive it). 

Avoid getting burned by steering clear of any 'work at home' offers that:

  • Sound too good to be true (as in, there is no actual work involved, just a scheme to make money).
  • Promise lots of money for little effort and no experience
  • Request money up-front to get more information about the job or to be considered for it
  • In the case of Twitter, you find exactly the same 'tweet' being posted by a number of different people (the links in these can lead to scam sites or install malware on your computer).

Written by eldering at News

Tagged with: scams twitter work_at_home

The Promise of Networking

Monday May 04 2009

   By Jim Selman | Bio

Do you remember when networks of computers first arrived on the scene? Moving information onto the new technological platform decentralized and dispersed information and knowledge, a move that resulted in a significant communications revolution that still has repercussions today. Giving people the ability to access and share what had previously existed only on paper or in the minds of certain individuals not only sped up the rate of transactions, but also freed individuals from a certain amount of manipulation. Some resisted the move to computers, feeling threatened[Read More]

Written by eldering at Fearless Aging

Tagged with: computer control ohmynews stickam technology twitter wisdom youtube

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