The customer might breach by e.g. inflating hit - rates by some software means, or by
paying with fake money (rubber checks, invalid cards, whatever).
Not exact matches
But if you are on a supposedly «Russian» dating site, and all women are Ukrainian, then it is probably
pay - per - letter, which means, «
money grab for
fake correspondence
with promises to marry you».
While you may not like the fact that you need to
pay some
money for the dates, the process is a great screen against scammers and spammers, combine that
with a really good duplicate and
fake accounts finding tool and you've got a really good network consisting only of real people interested in dating.
Once a guy datings websites
fake profiles up, dating company gets its
money, the scammer called e-whore gets
paid, and the poor victim left
with a few bucks less and disappointed.
Their sites are filled
with fake profiles and photos, these sites are usually designed to lure men to spend
money for the
paid membership.
Perhaps this shouldn't seem out of place for a sexually explicit adult dating website that describes itself as a platform
with «black chicks online looking for sex,» which I discovered courtesy of a Google search, but it would seem that this site uses these — presumably —
fake profiles to make
money by luring members into signing up (for free) and then having them
pay for the VIP service (which costs
money) to interact
with these good - looking people.
You can be assured to a certain extent that you are not interacting
with a
fake profile or the other person is not just taking you for a ride because one will surely not spend
money on a
paid website just to post a
fake profile.
The REAL reason they are doing this is because Amazon is flooded
with FAKE REVIEWS put up by Chinese troll farms, and Amazon's «Gold Box» is now just a clearing house for Chinese companies that
pay money for product placement.
The short version of the case is that a former assistant Vice-President at York is accused of participating in what the Star calls a «phony invoice scheme», where York alleges it
paid fake invoices,
with some of the
money being pocketed by the former assistant VP.