Avoiding Work At Home (Home Business) And Internet Scams - Part
II
In Part I of Work at Home (Home Business) Scams, there was a
list of home business opportunity scams. In this article we will
list some more types of home business and internet scams. There
is an increasing number of scams on the internet involving
sweepstakes, membership clubs for free money or merchandise.
Home Typing, Medical Billing, and More.
There are lots of work-from-home scams that involve persuading
you that some industry has more work than it can handle, and so
has to outsource to people working from home. For example, you
might be told that you'd be typing legal documents, or entering
medical bills into an electronic database. These scams have one
thing in common: they all say that all you need is your computer
and they all then go on to say that you need to buy some
'special software'.
This software might appear to be from a completely unrelated
company, but don't be fooled - the whole reason the
'work-from-home' ad was there to begin with was simply as
cynical marketing for the software.
MLMs and Network Marketing
As you can see there are hundreds of MLM money-making schemes.
Not all of them are bad but watch out because a lot these are
scams. The most popular one is to pay a high amount of fee to
join - Let's say this maybe ok to some extent. After you join,
you are encouraged to purchase their training material which
includes books, tapes, CDs etc. In fact your sponsor (your
referrer) and your upline is making money from the sale of these
training materials. Also, you will be invited to meetings and
seminars where you have to pay some entry fee to listen to a
successful member.
Soon they will encourage you to sell the training material to
your downline because that's how you are going to make money! In
fact there are people who make six figure incomes in this and it
is because they sell a lot study material and also have a
downline who sell a lot of the study material. While selling
these study material, they mention that these expense are tax
deductible. Think about this. Why should you pay to get training
and listen to successful members in order to learn how to sell
their products? Have you ever worked for a legitimate company as
sales person where you have to pay them to train you to sell
their products and services?
Chain Emails
Here what it is... You have to send some money to 5 people on
the list. After this, remove the name on the top of list and add
you name at the bottom (your name is #5 now). Forward this email
to others through bulk email and ask them to do the same. The
email says that you will receive money as others start doing
what you did. First of all spam is a crime. Before the email
era, this was done through snail mail and this was considered a
crime according to the USPS.
This eventually is supposed to make you a multi-millionaire! If
this was so easy, we would be having millionaires all around us.
If you can in your email client, just mark these emails as spam
so in this way you don't even get to read it.
Getting Free Merchandise
This is a scam where you have to join a membership club by
paying a fee that promises you expensive merchandise like
computers, laptops, jewelry, TV etc. This is very tricky and
misleading. You have to refer more people to join the club by
paying the same membership fee. You may bring in some people to
join the club but not enough to get the free stuff. A lot of
them give up. The people who started the club keep the
membership fee. This is absolute scam! Remember to keep your
money in the wallet. You have a better chance to make money or
win that merchandise in a lottery/sweepstakes.
Vacation prizes You get this email that says Congratulations,
you have been selected to receive a great vacation. Send money
to cover the administrative expenses and taxes. And, then you
don't hear anything about. If you contact them, then they will
encourage you to upgrade to a Luxury cruise or 5 star hotels.
When you get there, that cruise or hotel is nothing like
described when you paid for the upgrade.
Here what you can do when you receive such offer. Ask them for
the phone number of the cruise line or 5 star hotels. If you
succeed in getting it, the call those numbers and make sure
there is a reservation in your name and also ask about the
features of those cruise line or hotel. In this way you can
avoid this scam.
The Infamous Nigerian Email - 419 Email fraud
How can a list of internet scams be complete without even
mentioning the Nigerian email? So, here you go. These fraud
emails are referred to as 419 emails. You will receive an email
stating that there is some money (usually more than 30 million
dollars) that the sender received by some miscalculation or due
to the death of relative in a plane crash or something like. It
is amazing that they pick a plane crash from the news and also
get pictures of the burial with the name on the tombstone. The
last name on the tombstone may even match that of the sender of
the email.
The sender gets the money if it leaves the country in certain
number of days (usually a short period of time so that the
recipient shows some urgency). Or the other twist is that the
deceased person has 30 million dollars in a US bank and that
needs to be transferred to someone's account in the same
country. If you help them out they will give you $4,000,000 to
$5,000,000.
If you do respond to this email, then they will ask you for your
bank details. Also, you will be asked to give some advance fee
and taxes, which are usually much less (few hundreds to
thousands) than what you are going to get $5,000,000! Once you
start paying advance fee, there will be some problems/
complications like some official needs to be bribed to get
involved. There are always some complications that needs some
money to resolve. You keep sending money to a bank account in
Nigeria. Can you imagine filing a lawsuit against someone in
Nigeria? Eventually, the recipient will lose a few thousand
dollars. It has been estimated recently that US alone loses 1
million dollar per day. This is an international scam. You can
imagine how much is lost worldwide.
As you can see, running a 'home business' that just involves
'working' for one company is a bad idea. You are better off at
your old office job where at least your ex-employer was legit!
With Home business opportunities, you don't know who you're
dealing with. Here's the clincher, though: even with entirely
legal work-at-home offers that do pay you for your work, you
still won't make anywhere near as much as you can with your very
own home business. Visit http://www.internetandmoney.
com to discover how you can make money on the internet from
multiple streams of income ideas. Also, visit http://www.startsellingone
bay.com for eBay selling tips.