Do the free laptop offers online actually work?

November 25th, 2009 | by admin |

I keep getting e-mails about signing up for promotions in order to get a ‘free’ laptop. I was wondering if they actually work.

Seriously
Most of them are total rip off and scams but if your lucky enough to find a totally legite one you should do it.

Heres the site
http://getnotebook4free.blogspot.com/

enjoy

  1. 9 Responses to “Do the free laptop offers online actually work?”

  2. By Sweatshop Mogul on Nov 25, 2009 | Reply

    There is no such thing as a free lunch (or laptop, in this case).
    References :

  3. By silverbullet1321 on Nov 25, 2009 | Reply

    Sadly the percentage is so high of scams online for "free" anything that is safe to assume that everything is a scam that is "free"
    If you ever really think something is legit then it should have company information and you should contact them via phone and talk to them and never give them your credit card or personal information

    please do not listen to Morgan
    the website he suggested has a bad history of being unreliable and had a history of phishing (pretending to be something else to gain information unlawfully) scam, and Fraud
    References :

  4. By Brett P on Nov 25, 2009 | Reply

    Nope. They don’t work. You need to buy stuff from their program in order to qualify for the free [whatever] and you end up spending more than it would have cost you to buy the laptop in the first place.

    Edit: I don’t trust Morgan (no offense) because his link points to a blog where I’m sure you’ll be linking in a way that [gasp] gives him a referral for getting you to the site.
    References :

  5. By balplaya4404 on Nov 25, 2009 | Reply

    NOO!!!! If you see anything online that says free anything, it’s fake. Some of those site contain malicious cookies others just make you fill out a million surveys just to find out you have to pay for something or sign up for a credit card to get that free.
    References :

  6. By JIM on Nov 25, 2009 | Reply

    If they did, laptop manufacturer’s would quickly go bankrupt. Common sense.
    References :

  7. By 11 Bang Bang on Nov 26, 2009 | Reply

    They work of course, but those promotions you sign up for will say stuff like "Sign up for this free trial and pay only shipping!" but in reality you pay the shipping which is usually a small amount like "$3.99" or so and in the fine print it tells you if you don’t cancel within such and such time frame (usually a very short one) they will auto-renew your subscription and its usually a large amount of money like "$80-$100" per week or month. Also when you actually find out they are charging you these amounts, they make you jump through hoops in order to finally cancel it. So beware!
    References :

  8. By DSM Handyman on Nov 26, 2009 | Reply

    Yes, they do work. Here is how you do it:

    1. Sign up on a scam website that will pay you to get e-mail addresses for SPAM and/or pyramid sales scams.

    2. Sign up for two new Yahoo Answers accounts.

    3. Use one of those accounts to post a question asking if these things work.

    4. Use the other account to post an answer linking to the scam web site.

    5. If this doesn’t get enough "hits," simply repeat the process. Hopefully, you will have to get new accounts because so many people filed abuse complaints that the original one has been closed. You might get lucky enough that not enough have complained.

    Note: this is also wonderful for "Work At Home in your spare time" scams. I’m currently making 10 kazillion dollars a day working only 0.33 seconds per week so I know it works. My goal is to make 20 kazillion a day working 0.16 seconds a week.

    That’s it, simple and free, and it works!

    Okay, on a serious note: look at the profile of those who swear this is legitimate. If they joined Yahoo within the last few days and the only answers they gave are the exact same SPAM site, do you really trust them? If their "Q & A is private", it is also a red flag that their only purpose is to direct people to their site.

    Same goes for the people who ask these "questions." The majority of them are simply here to provide a vehicle for the SPAM answers. Of course, you are the exception :-)
    References :
    Experience researching scams.

  9. By Aaron on Nov 26, 2009 | Reply

    Seriously
    Most of them are total rip off and scams but if your lucky enough to find a totally legite one you should do it.

    well today’ss your lucky day because i happen to know of one all you have to do is sign up answerer some questions and as easy as 1 2 3 theres your laptop. there able to do that because they make money on the survey you take. I know i already got one from them and im going to see if i can get another

    Heres the site
    http://www.YourFreeNetbook.com/index.php?ref=5910369

    enjoy

    No thanks needed ;)
    References :

  10. By lorine on Nov 26, 2009 | Reply

    Seriously
    Most of them are total rip off and scams but if your lucky enough to find a totally legite one you should do it.

    Heres the site
    http://getnotebook4free.blogspot.com/

    enjoy
    References :

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