There is a trend in England through the 80's 90's and into 2000's of companies moving toward large numbers of low payed staff (and a very small number of very well payed staff) being ...
Being 14, I would like to start a summer job. My mother, a painter at Hawkins Enterprises (she paints homes after fire/water damage) had a genius idea. Since we live in the middle of nowhere, and ...
I can understand for jobs that absolutely need you to be there (doctor, construction,etc), but I'm talking about customer service, executive assistants, and other office jobs.
Ok so im at a hotel right now with my 2 children (12)&(7) and my sister since we're on vacation. The manager of the hotel said they received a complaint that my daughter (12) @ 8:00a.m took ...
Only recently I heard that Citigroup made attempts to acquire Wachovia bank, now I hear Citigroup is being bailed out by the government less than two months after. How is it possible for a bank ...
Kevin M
What is the golden amor electronic lottery from south africa?
I received an email claiming I had won a lottery. I am just curious if this is some sort of joke or can this really be possible.
No lottery by that name actually exists. This email message is a fake lottery scam. Do a Google search for the name of the lottery and you'll find plenty of scam warnings.
Consider the following facts about real lotteries:
They don't notify winners by email.
You can't win without first buying a lottery ticket.
They don't randomly select email addresses to award prizes to.
They don't use free email accounts (Yahoo, Hotmail, etc) to communicate with you.
They don't tell you to call a mobile phone number.
They don't tell you to keep your winnings secret.
They will never ask a winner to pay any fees to receive a prize!
If you receive any such suspicious messages, submit them to the Scam-O-Matic at
http://www.scamomatic.com for instant verification!
petebolos
it's a scam don't fall for it
GigiPlacaj
The email you probably received is called a "nigerian letter". Delete asap and do not reply to it. You could wind up losing money.
These usualy well constructed stories. They all say you will receive a lot of money for helping transfer funds into your account. They build a really realistic story around that. They ask you for money in order to do certain things in order to facilitate the transfer; but the transfer never happens so you only wind up paying and paying and paying...
Hope that was useful.
matt
scam dump it quick
Sal
Hey,
Nooo way, Son. That is just "spam." I use to freak at first thinking that someone somewhere answered my prayers. Then I got to thinking..."What world do I really live in?" Nothing is free...not even Love. Peace.