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Is it a scam for a small encyclopedia magazine to recruit typists?

Except for the instant best self-question and answer service, all of them will tell you that part-time typists are all liars without exception.

You insist on writing the letter and paying the money. Do you lack IQ and EQ, or are you deliberately conspiring to commit fraud?

It’s not just these part-time typing scam ads. Anyone who has to pay a deposit if they don’t have a job is a scam.

Look at the overwhelming website advertisements for yourself. Everyone’s username is a garbled number, and they all brag about themselves in unison. They come out to speak out and hearsay to lure you to this kind of website. Do you have to add fuel to the flames?

In this kind of part-time job, there are only a few types of deceptive tricks. You need to know the right ones first.

1. Claim to be recruiting, and then ask you to pay money in various names - deposit, security deposit, filing fee, integrity deposit, clothing fee, physical examination fee, training fee. Whether it’s online, on TV or in newspapers, you should have heard of the tactics of shady intermediaries. Do you have to cry and shout to pay those people?

2. The self-proclaimed mission allows you to post spam advertisements everywhere, recruit more people, and pull people layer by layer to be fooled.

Even if the other party doesn’t want you to be a free agent, I will really give you three melons and two sons.

You have to post advertisements for scammers. You are a doctor who defrauds terminally ill patients of their money, peddling false and fraudulent information, so that underage children will not pass the college entrance examination and go to training institutions, leaving people who are short of money. Do students believe those money-making advertisements and hand over the money obediently?

3. Claim to be a typist and ask you to pay the express fee and postage first, and then the other party will blacklist you and make you disappear.

In a country where the news media is monitored by the government, publishing houses can be opened casually.

Can anyone pretend to be a publishing house or make up a fictitious publishing house and claim to be recruiting? Typing part-time so you can get scammed?

4. They claim to be posting, asking you to register with your mobile phone and enter a verification code, personalize your signature, secretly customize high-priced information services, and charge your phone bill until the phone is shut down. For example, those who ask you to enter your mobile phone number, or try to defraud your mobile phone number, are afraid that it will not fall into the hands of insurance, intermediary, fraud, and transfer gangs.

5. Claims to make money, gives you a suspicious link, and allows you to contribute click-through rates and popularity.

Is it worth spending so much energy to click on these ads, paying for Internet and electricity bills, and wasting your eyesight, energy and time?

6. They claim to be verified, ask you to provide your bank card, and trick you into entering your password to steal the balance inside.

The security of personal information cannot be overemphasized, so be careful. It has been reported many times on TV and online, but some people still want to believe it. Maybe we should let them be fooled a few more times as a kind of education.

7. If you claim to be an entrepreneur, you will be asked to recruit people to get offline. You will get a certain amount of return as much as you claim to invest.

Those who sell online store advertisements post advertisements everywhere to attract people, waiting for you to fall into their trap.

I look forward to you every day to listen to their eloquent words and bring them huge benefits.

As for those of us netizens who hate advertising, what are you trying to do?

8. Self-proclaimed part-time job, sending you poisonous content, infecting your chat tools, and sending money-making advertisements to your friends.

Last year, a friend encountered the situation: the other party used a chat tool to pretend to be a friend, claiming that he had been in a car accident and wanted him to send money to save his life. Fortunately, he discovered that it was a scam in time.

Look at the overwhelming online store advertisements for yourself. Everyone’s username is Q number. They all advocate making money, want you to buy his software, and drag you to be his offline. It’s so crazy. Even if online corruption cannot be curbed, do you have to add fuel to the flames?