Is QuickRewards.Net A Scam? Boatload of 534 Spam Emails from Taking 10 Surveys for No Pay
90 Cents for a Bloomin' Nightmare. Sure, We All Have the Time for That. Bring it On
Survey Schmurvvey. Pay Me For My Time or Don't Bother to Ask Me One Question
Forget surveys. They will populate your email inbox sky high and you will be lucky if you can see past the spam to find anything legitimate. If you are of a certain age group, a certain income, or have too many degrees or not enough, let's face it, they don't want your opinion. They play 20 questions with you in a different way: "What is your gender? What is your education? How much do you make? 20 questions of that and you suddenly disqualify for answering something wrong.
Oh, now that you have answered 20 questions, you made a wrong move, you didn't have kids, you had too many kids, your kids were the wrong age, they didn't consumer enough of the fancy schmancy acoutrements of modern society. Since you answered this wrong, guess what, you don't qualify and in Internet terms, that means you suck so badly that the survey industry doesn't want your stinkin' opinion so that they can sell to everyone on earth. You have to be richer, poor, dumber, smarter, taller, you have to have a pile of B.S. behind your name from college, you have to have more of the same (M.S.), you have to have it piled higher and deeper. (pH.D) You have to have a house, a mortgage, 3.5 kids, an ex, you must be currently married and be a high spender who would not spend their time fooling around with these stupid, idiotic, senseless, mind-numbing surveys.
Fako Information, Couldn't Even Qualify for Dumbo Survey Even With A Good Income, Inbox of Spam
I played a game with one site even after 178 spams hit the spam area and the "legitimate" emails from them started hitting my inbox: 90 cents for this survey, 90 cents for that survey. Hey, if you want to take my opinion and put it down, I'd take 90 cents for that if you didn't waste my blessed time. This site was called QuickRewards.Net. I was a rich elite 56 year old woman taking a survey, Liz (last name not disclosed). I had an income of $50,008 which by the 100 top cities in America for income was a Seattle, Washington income. I was the regional director of something impressive and spent a lot of money on my career, things that the companies could sell me if they surveyed me. I made it through about 20 questions when I answered something not to their liking and they decided that I didn't qualify. Kicked out of a 90 cent survey for answering something differently after more than 5 minutes. Boy, if I didn't have self-esteem enough to kick them out of my inbox for wasting my precious time! What time would they waste next?
Meanwhile, back at the spam farm (I mean, my new email account that was for the purpose of this nonsense to begin with - and this was the only site I had signed up with), I was so buried in spam that I wanted to abandon the email account. Just for kicks, I logged back into my email account to find a choking amount of spam: three times the original amount, the whopping total of 534 spam emails. This was just from taking ONE survey. This is not to mention that their sign up process took more than 20 minutes and they had to force you to sign up for their advertisements or you would not be interested in contributing to the economy? Are they afraid that their product sucks so badly that you wouldn't want it if you weren't forced to sign up for information about it?
How the Elite Make Money on the Internet, Not Overnight, That's For Sure
Here's what the elite people do on the Internet: they advertise products and services, which, if you purchased them, would make them a bunch. They figure out how to get seen instantly through paying the search engines for 48 hour guaranteed inclusion. They either figure out search engine optimization or they do it themselves from video tutorials. They automatically have a feel for what will waste their time. They read the comments on the bottom of the YouTube tutorials and they know instantly if someone else considers it intelligent enough to use 2 to 5 minutes on. Boycott surveys! Hasta la vista time wasters! Here's what I call their survey spam, that they con you into taking for 90 cents a survey: a unit a blabbler. How about running it together? Aunitablabber.
Here's what's going on, buddy (a famous movie line). Survey sites, if you are going to take 20 minutes or more of my time signing up, ruin a virgin email account with boatloads of spam, and disqualify me from 10 surveys, the whole stinkin' survey industry needs a heads up. Get your act together. We don't read our email to read about your latest and greatest spam. We might be interested in a few things because we buy as part of the economy. We can't use every stinkin' service mankind and womankind invented put together in one very sloppy package of stinkin' spam. People actually are told they can get rich from survey scams, going to work in their pajamas. "take this job and shove it." What a unitablabber. No blabber in my inbox. Take your advertising somewhere else. Better yet. Don't advertise. You'd actually be able to sell something.
Is there a way one can report the rip-off of time to Ripoffreport.com?
Published by Michelle Danae Meadowland
Sunflowersummer at HubPages View profile
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1 Comments
Post a CommentHave you tried contacting customer service? I use QuickRewards all the time and never had an issue...