ABC Article Directory banner displaying blue butterfly logo. Click to go directly to the main Homepage
Your Ad Here

Home | Culture And Society | Scams

Add This Social Bookmark Button


animated blue butterfly symbol for the ABC Article Directory

Is Google Cash a Scam?


By: Sean Kells Click author's name for more of his/her articles

Recently, you may have come across ads on social networking sites or on Google promoting Google Cash "systems" which claim you can make thousands of dollars a month simply by "posting links" on Google.

When you click on the ad for one of these Google cash systems, you are taken to what appears to be someone's personal blog style website showing you a photo of a check and telling you about how they make $5,000 every month posting links on Google.

So, can you really earn thousands of dollars a month by posting links on Google or are these Google cash systems a scam?

You know the old saying - "If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is". Well, in the case of Google cash, it's more applicable than ever. In fact, every one of these Google cash blogs are completely phony. There are dozens of them on the internet, all showing the exact same $5,000 check and telling the same story.

So, how does the Google cash scam work? Well, after the scam artist tells you their personal rags-to-riches story, they tell you to click to order your free Google Cash Starter Kit ($1.95 for shipping) so that you too can make $5,000 a month.

Upon clicking to order your Google Cash Starter Kit, you are taken to another site to sign up for the Google Cash System. You then sign up and give your credit card number to pay for that $1.95 shipping charge that I mentioned earlier.

Here is where the scam takes off.

It turns out that the Google cash kit offer is a 7 day free trial, after which the program starts charging you over 70 bucks every month unless you cancel your membership!

So, how do people make money with this Google cash scam system? By signing up for the system, creating their own fake blog and then drawing more victims in to signing up for the "free" Google Cash starter kit. Each time someone gets sucked in, the scam recruiter gets to share in that $70 charge that the victim ends up getting on their credit card bill. Nice, huh?

While there are some exciting and perfectly legitimate ways to earn a great income online, Google cash just isn't one of them. Clearly, it is something that you will want to avoid at all costs.

Article Source: ABC Article Directory



About The Author: Sean Kells helps people discover legitimate ways to make money on the internet. To learn more and claim your free copy of his new ebook, 7 Days to Online Profits, visit him at: ==> ReviewAroo.com



Bookmark and Share eMail This Article to Friends

Please Rate this Article


Not yet Rated



RSS feeds on demand
Click the XML Icon Above to Receive Scams Articles Via RSS!



Copyright ABC Article Directory All rights protected. Script Services by: Sustainable Website Design
Use of our free service is protected by our Privacy Policy and Terms of Service Contact Us
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported License.

Wind Powered Hosting

Powered by Article Dashboard