eProfits.com is a website that claims to not only provide you with a work at home opportunity, but also to provide you with the necessary educational components and work at home community to help make your business a success.
A quick tour of the eProfits site shows that they offer classes on using social media, blogging, search engine optimization, and many other methods you can use to make money online. Their membership includes access to these classes, your very own website, and a forum of people who work within this industry should you have questions.
For $4.95 you get a 3-day trial membership to your very own website that you can use to make money online. After the end of the three day trial if you have not canceled your membership, your credit card will be charged $49.95 every 30 days to maintain your membership with the eProfits community.
So What’s the Deal with eProfits?
Though the educational and community premises of eProfits.com sound very promising, there have been some customer complaints in regards to them that you should know.
First of all, many customers complain that eProfits continually tries to sell them products intended to enhance their online business. Since eProfits partners up with many other people within the work at home community, customers say that they are always receiving offers for software, programs, or further memberships.
Another customer complained that when he purchased these extra packages from eProfits.com, money was taken out of his account, but he was never actually given the products that he purchased, and though he contacted eProfits repeatedly, this problem was never addressed. He neither received these products nor got his money back.
Finally, though eProfits.com says you can cancel your membership at anytime, they give no information at all on their refund policy. Often this means that the company does not offer refunds. And since eProfits.com takes credit card numbers directly without going through a third party, if they refuse to refund your money you generally have no other options.
REMEMBER: if it looks too good to be true, it is. Period. No two ways about it.
AND REMEMBER: that old science saying, "you must have input to have output". Meaning, you cannot make money without spending it. JUST MAKE SURE YOU SPEND IT IN THE RIGHT PLACES.
My brother did not send this to me and knew nothing about it. How can they infiltrate his email and raid his contacts. Surely false impersonation is illegal.
I've changed my password but if this continues i will be taking legal proceedings.
If anyone has the patients, eprofits number for support is 1-877-532-1666. Don't even try, they will never answer with a live operator.
When I opened the real cnbc.com site by typing it in the address bar, I clicked on their "contact us" link and sent them a message alerting them that someone is defrauding their logo.
These emails are not originating from 'hacked' email accounts, but your contact details have been harvested somehow, either by the maintainer of eprofits.com or other criminals that have sold the details to them. Unfortunately there is no way to undo this, so be vigilant when clicking on any links in email messages, even if they appear to be from someone you know.
Aside from the harvesting of contact addresses, the abuse of third-party servers to host the intermediate links to eProfits.com (disguised as a legitimate news story or some such) is most certainly illegal and can be interpreted as 'hacking'. Details have been passed onto the owners of these sites and to the abuse contact at Moniker Privacy Services who currently shield the identity of the owner of eprofits.com.
That is unless you, your friend, or any of his/her friends, or their friends, etc. have ever clicked “like” on Facebook, or allowed acces to their contacts for any number of offers.
You people have to realize that, as soon as you or anyone remotely connected to you shares their info with Facebook, your address(es) winds up in a databank that is sold to online marketers and list managers world-wide.
Not to pin the blame on Facebook either: you didn’t really think that they would make all they have to offer for FREE, now did you?
Also… Google is also not FREE, hate to tell ya. Ever wonder why the first page of results normally don’t take you to a serious site for what you’re looking for? Or the first sites are normally so-called “aggregates” or “review” or “list” sites? These sites are what are called “Affiliate Marketing” sites.
I do feel sorry for you all… but please read and research a little before complaining about “hacked” or “scams”. The Internet is NOT FREE!