A punch from the current economic global crisis is a major contribution to a chameleon lifestyle many people are willing to adapt for a while to make ends me.
Take for example me among other Internet users who believe that apart from posting a good article for my readers I can actually find another legitimate [tag-tec]work at home online job[/tag-tec] to supplement my income.
While there are countless offers out there asking for a one-time membership fee that in most cases turn out to be waste of dollars and time and dire scams, others are actually offering free sign up chances.
Imagine doing simple tasks as just reading emails, participating in surveys, clicking ads, receiving SMS on your cell phone and becoming a millionaire in no time.
This is when saying like that which glitter is not always gold becomes an issue to consider before parting with your hard-earned dollars.
The free and paid to join sites
During my efforts to find genuine [tag-tec]work at home online jobs[/tag-tec], I found that many of these are free to join to perform a couple of tasks in exchange for dollars.
In bold words I guess meant to be just an attention grabber, a site visitor is promised a few dollars considered to be appreciation for accepting to be a member.
I tried with one of them, and they emailed me saying they have just credited my account with five free dollars and once I completed the first 3-minute survey, further $ 0.5 were added.
The question I am asking myself now is when I will receive my first survey invitation but I am convinced it is just one of the many fruitless [tag-tec]work at home online jobs[/tag-tec].
Most of these free to join sites are those that pay members for participation in an opinion survey for a given company products and services, as long as he or she completes.
The biggest problem is that once you try to log in to some of these sites using the user and password details you just created, the response is a disappointing “invalid userâ€.
Others take you through a number of steps asking for personal information which they claim will be confidential, and even though the sign up is stated “freeâ€, final step demands a sign up fee of a given amount.
Still others, let you log in and instruct you to click on one of the available survey, and when you do, they tell you it did not match your country.
The paid [tag-tec]work at home online jobs[/tag-tec] are so familiar to almost anyone who surfs the net.
They all look like they are owned and directed by similar individuals who do not leave out the term “tired of being scammed†and of course well written testimonies of current satisfied members.
Is it not ironic that some of these sites are listed as expert scam creators of our days, when you Google search them with a tag scam?
They also mind to ask you to hurry up and take advantage of the current membership fee, before they raise it.
The likes of these are easy data entry jobs, be paid to drive or shop.
Others claim they have a super-earning online secret and use videos to show you how they did it, but off course the faces will never be clear.
As of now, I have not found any legitimate offer especially that values the expertise many of us have, however, I should caution you to gather as much information, ahead of making any payments!