A while back I created a parody site with the headline Make 10 Billion Dollars Posting A Link On Google which I assumed was obviously making fun of these Make Money Posting Links on Google Scams. Apparently on the internet sometimes “clear and conspicuous” in the mind of consumers doesn’t mean providing completely nonsensical writing with gigantic, obviously fake images, and pictures of babies giving comments and claims that you’ve trained a dog to post links on Google.
Click here to see the original Make 10 Billion Dollars Posting A Link on Google site.
At one point someone tweeted the site to Matt Cutts, Google’s head of web spam and apparently he found it funny enough to retweet to his followers on twitter.
Even there among seemingly intelligent people there were comments made – that didn’t seem to be made in jest – such as “is this a scam?”
Pretty unbelievable, but a recent experience turned out even more oddly.
I posted the site to a review exchange on WhyDoWork here and received the following strange remarks that this time were clearly NOT made in jest:
“I liked the way the site was set up but I couldn’t really see the proof. Everything was all scrawled out and it made for a bit of suspicion for me. Pretty good tho.”
AND
“The layout of the site is neat but the information is a bit misleading with making million and billion dollars with Google. It is a bit unrealistic and most of the the Google kits on there are scams, so I am not sure about this site.”
WOW!
I think those two consumers gave me more insight into why the Google Kit scams have been so successful than the thousands of Google Kit scam victims who have posted on the WorkAtHomeTruth site over the past year!