Texting Scam - Thanks At&t, Verisign

January 27, 2008

I’m not sure how this happens but for the past three months I’ve been billed by my wireless provider, AT&T, for “m-Qube” internet services (Ringtones?) for $9.99 plus tax. I called AT&T each time and asked what this was and why I was being charged for something I never ordered; they could not give me an answer. Each time the customer service representative seemed to work through a process of removing me from this fraudulent service. They even initiated a stop purchase service where each line on the account is prevented from downloading any type of content without first entering a special PIN number. Well, guess what? None of it worked. After explaining all this to the latest customer service rep tonight at AT&T, I opted to change the telephone number.

I strongly suggest that you review your next wireless bill and look for any reference to m-Qube. Regardless of whom your cell provider is, m-Qube can and will attack and bill you. If you see m-Qube on your bill, treat it like a CANCER! Cancel your account if you have to, or at a minimum, change your number. Anything less will not work.

Bux.to a Scam? If if smells like poop…

January 27, 2008

Money for free for the masses from Bux.to? My guess = no. This just gives me a bad feeling. I first learned of this while watching a live session of the Chris Pirillo show at live.pirillo.com. Chris was talking about Bux.to and how he was excited and felt pretty good about its legitimacy. Now even though I trust Chris and have no reason to doubt him, I still have serious doubts about Bux.to and their system. Chris decided to sign up for an account (I think he signed up for a premium account and spent about $500). After a short period of doing this and announcing it online live on his show, he had already made just under a hundred dollars in the first twelve hours.

A basic account is free and from what I understand, the system works by paying a small amount (1 cent) to a member for viewing paid advertising (all seem to be get rich quick ads) on their site for a period of time (30 seconds) – the more ads you review, the more money you make. On the backside of this, Bux.to figures than can generate enough people viewing advertiser’s links that some will eventually make a purchase from that advertiser.

If you don’t want to do all the viewing and clicking yourself, you can always purchase your own referrals instead of getting your own for free. This, in theory, increases your view rate and should bring in more money. This, I suspect, is where Bux.to is making their monies. It’s a numbers game - You spend $459.00 to purchase referrals and they do the ad viewing for you. The more referrers you have under you actually viewing ads is what is supposed to bring in the funds. That is, if they spend as much time as you’d like viewing these ads…30 seconds each? Sounds like the fun would wear outta this pretty quick.

Here’s what I’ve found on Bux.to:

· Their paypal Id is: FreelancerMarketing.com. A website with absolutely nothing on it but some worthless links. A simple email address, no address, nada, zip, zilch. Wouldn’t you want people to know more about your consultancy business?

· Bux.to name registration is private and the site hosting goes out to somewhere in Germany.

· Their forums are at abux.info

· There are over 700 Youtube.com videos on Bux.to mostly by younger males wanting you to become their referral. Many use the maximum payout example while talking about it as an enticement to get you to sign up under them.

· They sell you ads for anywhere from .019 cents per view down to .015 if you spend $16,000.00 with them

Bottom line, I’m keeping my money in the bank. I don’t have the numbers as far as referrals that Chris does, so a dollar a day isn’t enough to get me interested. As of this writing, I haven’t heard if Chris actually got his initial $500 back.

If you have success with bux.to, I’d like to hear about it. Please drop me a line and I’ll share it.