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The latest crackdown involved the Federal Trade Commission, the Securities and Exchange Commission (news - web sites) and the states of Louisiana, Texas, Oklahoma and Arkansas, and other authorities.Among the cases:
* Alyon Technologies allegedly used a modem dialing service to disconnect consumers from their own Internet service provider and link them to the scammers' network. By capturing their phone number, the company billed them $4.99 a minute for videotext, or Web video and information services, that they typically didn't receive or authorize.
* A spam e-mail offer touted work-at-home envelope stuffing. The pitch from Easy Money promised consumers they would earn $1 for each envelope they stuffed, and as much as $1,500 a week. Actually, for a $50 fee, they got instructions to market a deceptive credit-repair manual, the FTC says.
* College Funding Center allegedly told college-bound students and their parents that it would obtain all their college funding for $895.
Instead, the Web-based operation supplied them scholarship information they could have gotten free.
* Another Web work-at-home scheme, Instant Internet Empires, promised buyers they could make $115,000 a year with their product. But for $47.77, they simply got the right to reproduce the company's advertising Web site and try to resell it to others, the FTC says.
* Click for Mail claimed consumers who coughed up $49.95 were guaranteed a ''100% unsecured'' Visa or MasterCard credit card with a credit limit up to $5,000.
Actually, consumers got access to a Web page with hyperlinks to sites of credit card issuers -- a list freely available to Web surfers, the FTC says.
Some of these are pretty scary. Just because something is available free is it a crime to charge people for it?
And what about Instant Internet Empires? Almost sounds like an affiliate program.
That's not what I read in your examples. What I read is that all of them promised A, but delivered B (if anything at all). Whether that B is freely available elsewhere or not is irrelevant. What counts is that the paying customers didn't get A as they expected.
However, it IS illegal to charge a fee for the FAFSA. That's the government's free application for student (college) aid. It's possible that the phoney college scholarship search may have charged for FAFSA forms as well.
-berli
They wanted only money orders so the orders came in, then the guys sent the customers a letter back saying that stock had run out and they were pleased to offer a refund.
In the letter was a cheque for the full amount and the account even had funds in the only problem was that the on the cheque in big red letters was the company name - which was something like - Pedophile Sex Video Association!
Needless to say not many people wanted to cash their cheques!