Consulting Business Wealth Enabler Consultant How To Internet Systems

Consulting Business Wealth Enabler Consultant How To Internet Systems Since 1997

By - Philip Harman

How to Make Online Money? – Not with Pay to Read Emails

How to Make Online Money? – Not with Pay to Read Emails

How to Make Online Money – Earn Two Thousand US Dollars Every Seventy Seconds?

Sounds real good, but are pay to read emails a scam? That was the question several other friends and I started out with about 8 weeks ago in June 2008. We’re like plenty of people, struggling to pay the bills and trying real hard to learn how to make money on the internet, so when these rumors about a system where one got paid well to read email advertisements came along, we were very attentive.

What seemed very interesting was that they weren’t offering to pay a penny per email, or five pennies per email, but dollars. Lots of them. Not five dollars, not ten dollars, not fifty dollars, but two thousand dollars for spending 70 seconds watching each email! It seemed outrageous, and we blessed our good fortune for stumbling onto this very discreet program.

Before we dived in we did our due diligence and searched the internet for headlines such as the one you see above, ie email scam etc. Nothing. Not even a hint on discussion boards or blogs, just a ghostly silence. Ok, we thought, that’s not bad, no complaints. Maybe it is for real.

We tried to understand how such a program could exist, how it could pay that kind of money and survive. We theorized it might be a limited numbers corporate study group, watching how people responded to ads. We theorized it might be Russian mafia laundering money.

On the email web site there is a contact button, but emails sent with these questions enclosed brought no answers. I should have paid more attention to that.

The Web Sites

Now the read email web sites are very professional looking, with nice graphics and well placed advertisements that scroll and change. A well presented members box where one can sign on and control where the emails go is at the top of the page. Everything looks, well, like someone spent plenty of time and money setting it up. In order to receive the credit that one builds up, paid US dollars via paypal or several other means no less, one has to build up a certain minimum sum in the account. Its always a large sum too, like half a million dollars, and they say one can expect to receive payment after a length of time has passed, in some cases 15 days, in other 60 days or two entire months.

They offer payout in cash, or in kind credits towards advertising using their sites. All the major money transfer websites we’re familiar with are represented; Paypal, Alert Pay, Liberty Reserve, E gold and E bullion to name a few.

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Now, in order to receive all that lovely cash, not credits, quicker, if one signs up as a paid member, bronze, silver, gold and diamond, then the getting paid parameters become much shorter, ie ,000 and 15 days. I decided that we should find out if this was for real sooner rather than later, instead of wasting months and months of clicking adverts, so I stuck out my 0 via paypal for a diamond membership, and overnight I was a member of Jacob mails.com.

The Ads Started Arriving

From the first day I received about 35 emails per day. Many of them were for other sites just like Jacob mails, but were paying different amounts per email, and with quicker or slower pay out times. The rest of the ads appear to be regular mainstream ads, the content of which we’re very familiar with on the internet; dating sites, get rich quick schemes, military recruiting ads, all sorts. When I pressed on any links within these they all were active and working and led to home sites all over the world.

With busy days I spent several hours each night clicking and opening the ads while I watched TV, and in about 3 weeks I had crossed the diamond member’s payout threshold of ,000. All I had to do was put in my request, notify which account my money was to go into and then wait.

I Request my Earnings…

Well, I waited, and waited and waited.

You might guess how the rest of this goes.

After The Money Didn’t Show Up

I began emailing them politely pointing out that some oversight had led to the omission of my payment and could they, well, get with the program, I’m ready.

There was no answer of any kind to half a dozen emails asking for clarification and payment. In fact the only thing that happened was that the membership information box that I should fill out to request payment, has been removed, so that now I can’t even request any money.

E Mail Scam Investigated

After a few more weeks it has become clear that no payment would be forthcoming. I went over to paypal that I had used to pay my diamond membership. I intended to see whether paypal could recover my 0 fee, as they sometimes can.

When I looked closer at the transaction details, I saw that the payment goes to an individual in China, not to a company name. The name in my paypal is Lixin Wang, and it’s safe to assume he is the individual at the core of at least several of these scams.

‘Web Accept Payment Sent (Unique Transaction ID #7TW6XXXXX) Name: Lixin wang (The recipient of this payment is Non-U.S. – Verified) Email: lxinwng@gmail.com Payment Sent to: support@jacobmails.com ‘

I filed a complaint with paypal, they can be very active with fraudulent use of their service, but to this day, about 4 weeks later, I haven’t heard anything from them. Not even to acknowledge receipt of my email, even that is somewhat unusual, so, needless to say, there’s been no sign of a refund either.

Here are several names of ‘Pay to Read emails’ sites that I used, to no avail.

jacobmails.com/pages/index.php pink-mails.com/pages/index.php best-mails.com/pages/index.php hmailsmoney.com/pages/index.php pretty-mail.com/pages/index.php eagle-mails.com/pages/index.php ippomails.net/pages/index.php

When I wanted to upgrade an account, I discovered that many of the account numbers are the same account, despite being on different web sites.

Its safe to assume that nearly everyone of these sites are scams, and exist solely to skim off hundred dollar members fees as people like myself join up for the gold memberships. I’ve also read the idea that these sites somehow create fake high traffic flows to improve the online rankings of a different website.

Reportedly some websites do pay out, and one recognizes them by the one cent per email pay outs. But…there are even complaints about these sites too, that they will pay out some tiny amounts, and then cease any further payments.

Here is a link to sites that are known to have paid out; squidoo.com/ptcsites

Here is a link to known fraud sites; ptctalk.com/scamalert.php

After several thousand sold membership fees, there is real money being made from unsuspecting people.

If you want to see discussion boards about these scams, it’s hiding out under the words ‘pay to read’ or ‘pay to click’, or ‘ptc/ptr email scam’. Just type that into google and see what you get. There’s actually plenty of discussion about this, it’s just hiding behind the term, pay to click. You can copy and paste these links to your url bar.

Hi, my name is Roger Wadham and I’m the owner/editor of Wealth Matrix Review.
We hunt out scams and reveal honest programs.
WMR reviews over 50 popular internet wealth schemes, including background checks with the Better Business Bureau and The RipOff Report.

These profiles enable us to discover and reveal the better wealth making programs.

Don’t be left behind while others live their dreams. For rock solid information you can take to the bank, click here now: http://how-to–make-money–online.com/

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