Filed under: Blogging, Business, Financial, Internet, Life, Money, Notables, Random, Snopes, Sunday, Sunday Snopes, Uproars
Secret Shopper Scams.
Last week’s (though not actually posted last week due to icky viruses invading the Fracas) Sunday Snopes feature dealt with whether or not Coca-Cola makes an effective spermicide.
Anyone who uses email is bound to, at some point or another, receive an email containing a ‘warning’ about some terrible crime or event that they should beware of. These emails always tell the recipient to pass it along to everyone they know in order to warn others and ’save’ someone else from the same terrible fate. Most often, these emails contain some sort of claim relating the event or crime in the warning, to a specific location or police department in order to convince the recipient of its authenticity.
In mostly every case, these email warnings are hoaxes, nothing more than malicious chain letters that scare the uninformed into becoming pawns in the spamming of hundreds of thousands of people.
Snopes.com is a credible place to verify such stories you might receive. As a regular Sunday feature, fracas will highlight a different story each week to do our part in stopping or lessening the impact of the distribution of such stories.
Sunday Snopes Snippets
Sunday, March 25, 2007:
Claim: Scammers defraud aspiring secret shoppers.
Status: True.
- [Quote] A common form of the employment swindle is that of the fraudulent secret shopper job posting. Such ads tout the ease of the work, the short hours, and the money to be made from merely visiting stores each day to make purchases, even as they stress that no special training or educational background is required of prospective hires. According to such come-ons, successful applicants will be working on behalf of a variety of retailers and manufacturers of consumer products who are interested in knowing more about how products are displayed and marketed in stores and how customers are treated in such establishments. Those hired by such agencies will spend their days effecting specific purchases at specific retailers, afterwards turning in reports about their experiences and collecting fat paychecks for their troubles.
- There are bona fide “secret shopper” jobs to be had, which makes telling sheep from goats regarding which of such job postings are real and which are but the opening gambits of frauds not always a straightforward and simple matter.[End Quote]
Please click here to read the rest of the snopes.com write-up regarding this true claim.
Please bookmark fracas. Your next Sunday Snopes feature will be posted on Sunday, April 1, 2007!
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