WorkAtHomeTruth Weekly WrapUp November 30th, 2008


Top Business Question – Great Questions about Article Cash Robots

I’ve received some great questions about Article Cash Robots. Unfortunately they’re all from the same person. I would love to get more questions from those of you going through the system as I’ve found at least one place that needed further clarification.

Click here to see the questions and answers about Article Cash Robots

Top Telecommuting Site of the Week – Rat Race Rebellion

Rat Race Rebellion is a popular site that offers free daily telecommuting job leads.

The Rat Race Rebellion is a popular telecommuting site that offers free telecommuting job leads.

Click here to view free telecommuting job leads from RatRaceRebellion.com

As usual – especially when dealing with free telecommuting job leads – be sure to follow the rules here.

Top Freelance Update of the Week – Writing that Pays

I’ve added videos about freelance writing from Expert Village and a couple more companies that use writers on a regular basis from the page I helped put together at the HubPage about making money writing for the web.

Click here to find companies that use writers of all levels on a regular basis

Top Scam Research Site of the Week – KnowKnockOffsForum.com

Just in time for the holidays to make sure you don’t get taken by fake goods.

From the site:

items in question are reviewed by members and moderators who are knowledgeable about the designer and/or style in question. The review process is intended to assist buyers in their decision to purchase and to assist them if a counterfeit item is purchased. Education is power!

Click here to visit KnowKnockoffsforum.com

And don’t forget about the Search4Scams.com search engine where you can search through many resources that we hand-selected to search through.

Legal chain letters? Think again.

I’ve noticed a huge proliferation of chain letters recently. I saw a ton of them posted on various forums all the way from Scam.com to AARP.org. Desperate people want to believe that chain legals are legal. Well, the fact is – chain letters are NOT legal no matter how you slice it.

From the Federal Trade Commission:

The Lowdown on Chain Letters

Everybody’s received them – chain letters or email messages that promise a big return on a small investment. The promises include unprecedented good luck, mountains of recipes, or worse, huge financial rewards for sending as little as $5 to someone on a list or making a telephone call. The simplest chain letters contain a list of names and addresses, with instructions to send something – usually a small sum of money – to the person at the top of the list, remove that name from the list, and add your own name to the bottom of the list. Then, the instructions call for you to mail or email copies of the letter to a certain number of other people, along with the directions of how they should “continue the chain.” The theory behind chain letters is that by the time your name gets to the top of the list, so many people will be involved that you’ll be inundated with whatever the chain promises to deliver. One recently circulated email chain letter promised earnings of “$50,000 or more within in the next 90 days of sending email.” Whether you receive a chain letter by regular mail or email – especially one that involves money – the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) reminds you that:

  • Chain letters that involve money or valuable items and promise big returns are illegal. If you start one or send one on, you are breaking the law.
  • Chances are you will receive little or no money back on your “investment.” Despite the claims, a chain letter will never make you rich.
  • Some chain letters try to win your confidence by claiming that they’re legal, and even that they’re endorsed by the government. Nothing is further from the truth.
  • If you’ve been a target of a chain email scam, contact your Internet Service Provider and forward the email to the FTC at spam@uce.gov.

The U.S. Postal Inspection Service offers information about chain letters at www.usps.gov/websites/depart/inspect . Or you can call the Postal Inspection Service toll-free, 1-888-877-7644

The FTC works for the consumer to prevent fraudulent, deceptive, and unfair business practices in the marketplace and to provide information to help consumers spot, stop, and avoid them. To file a complaint or to get free information on consumer issues, visit ftc.gov or call toll-free, 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY: 1-866-653-4261. The FTC enters consumer complaints into the Consumer Sentinel Network, a secure online database and investigative tool used by hundreds of civil and criminal law enforcement agencies in the U.S. and abroad.

zswjotnrrtnrr is now following me on Twitter!

I don’t really remember anyone named zswjotnrrtnrr, although there was a kid named fjbrovxldzi from 5th grade I remember. Good kid.

I checked out zswjotnrrtnrr’s profile and it definitely wasn’t fjbrovxldzi. Actually he reminded me a bit more of przwxltvmn. I never liked him much.

I’ll probably just stop zswjotnrrtnrr from following me on Twitter. Hope I don’t hurt his feelings.