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Avoiding work-at-home scams

As the economy cools, work-at-home scams are heating up.

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The Rip-Off Report has reams of reading material on cases filed by folks who fell victim to work-at-home scams last year. According to Web site founder Ed Magedson, approximately one-third of his database is devoted to work-at-home complaints.

"It's mind-boggling how many people get caught," says Magedson, whose Ripoff Report has been contacted by the FBI, the Department of Homeland Security, the U.S. Postal Service inspectors and attorneys general in many states.

"It's not that people are stupid. Most Americans are kindhearted, honest people who don't want to believe the other guy is not."

Tory Johnson, founder and CEO of Women for Hire in New York City, fields phone calls daily from people asking whether work-at-home offers are legitimate.

"And most times when someone asks me about an opportunity, it's a fraud," she says.

Johnson sees the current economy as another tool scammers use to prey on innocent people looking to make extra cash.

"More than ever, people are looking for any and all ways to bring in money," she says. "Because of that, you're often more willing to suspend your skeptical side. Desperation sometimes leads to hope."

Legal, but not lucrative
One of the more popular scams claims to pay boatloads of money to workers who type at home.

A typical claim declares home-based workers can make $250 per day (sometimes more) working just 30 minutes typing at home. Companies that promote this snow job usually ask gullible workers to purchase useless software for orders that never materialize.

Other unscrupulous companies seek workers to help convince search engines that the company's site is highly rated by customers. Hired workers fool the search engines by placing a series of ads and remarks on hundreds of blogs, chat boards and other interactive opportunities.

Most Americans are kindhearted, honest people who don't want to believe the other guy is not.

While the job is legal, it's typically far from lucrative, according to Gary Warner, director of research in computer forensics at the University of Alabama. Warner works with both the FBI and Homeland Security on cases of network intrusion, phishing and spam.

"There are a handful of people who are very good at this, very fast and have long-lasting relationships with people that pay for that kind advertising," Warner says. "They might make $100 a week."

Unfortunately, many of the companies seeking paid workers deal in pornography, and they disappear before mailing that first paycheck, Warner says.

Reshipping scams
Reshipping scams are another work-at-home "opportunity" that promise more than they deliver.

In a typical scheme, a company may spin a story that it needs electronics packaged a particular way for international shipments. It sends the goods to a worker's home, along with packing supplies and preprinted mailing labels. The worker is instructed to take the product from the original packaging, repack according to instructions and run to the post office.

Warner says companies often do pay the wage they promise for this work. However, there's a catch.

"The problem is, the electronics you're shipping were purchased from Dell or Best Buy using stolen credit card numbers," he says. "They're using your home to avoid getting caught by Border Patrol looking for packages coming from Dell."

 
 
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