Catholic Info
Traditional Catholic Faith => General Discussion => Topic started by: Matthew on September 30, 2015, 10:26:05 AM
-
http://qm.ee/29D82F4A
It's called Qmee.
It's very easy. You install a plug-in on your browser, and every so often a little window will open on the left side with links you can click on for 4 - 7cents. You click them, and every so often you can easily "cash out" right to your Paypal account.
I made 8 bucks so far. Considering how easy it was, I'm glad to have done it. 8 bucks is 8 bucks!
I wanted to try it out myself first -- well, I did. It's legit, it works, etc.
If you want to sign up, please use the link above.
-
Why will someone pay you 4 to 7 cents to click on a pop up window?
-
8 bucks is 32 reals here...I'm tempted to try it.
-
Why will someone pay you 4 to 7 cents to click on a pop up window?
Some research companies will pay people to allow them to monitor their consumer habits over a short period of time.
-
I haven't used this, but I suspect it most often appears when you're looking for something related to a retail product. For example, if you're researching hair styling techniques, the pop-up may be for a company that sells hair products. They pay 10 or 20 cents for you to visit their site and Qmee passes some of that on to you.
-
I should be clear on this -- it's not a lot of money. This is for unemployed teens, unemployed penniless millennials still living at home, etc.
It took me a few months to get that 8 dollars. But after a few months, I could either have 0 or 8 dollars. I'll take the 8 dollars. Considering how easy it was to click on a link that appears in a new frame that occasionally interrupts my shopping, it's worth it.
It's not a lot of money, which is why it's "true". Anything promising you serious money, get rich quick, or anything sounding too good to be true, usually is.
-
I should be clear on this -- it's not a lot of money. This is for unemployed teens, unemployed penniless millennials still living at home, etc.
I don't know, I think it's best suited for the employed who can get away with clicking random ads while doing their work. :smirk:
-
$8 doesn't sound like much, but nowadays you can buy a fast, fully functional cell phone with no strings (or contracts) attached at Best Buy or Amazon for $20.
Android 4.4 (a nice recent version), 4.5" color touchscreen, 5 MP camera, all the usual things that cell phones have -- for $20.
The screen is 800 x 480. Pretty good for a cell phone sized screen!
2 1/2 years ago I bought a MUCH crappier Samsung Dart USED for $113 shipped to use for game testing. And I shopped around first, believe it or not (I can't believe it, personally!) Slow, 320x240 screen, an old version of Android even for that time, etc.
I can't believe how they afford to give you that much for $20. It must be a loss leader, hoping you'll sign up for service.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00K2XX4OY/ref=as_li_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=B00K2XX4OY&linkCode=as2&tag=httpwwwchanco-20&linkId=SXDELSHZKKJOFYGB
I mean, the 5 MP digital camera in that phone is worth the $20. Nevermind a portable wifi-enabled computer that runs pretty much every state-of-the-art program for Android.
People got excited about the Raspberry Pi for $35. This is probably faster, and comes with a battery, screen, etc.!
And some of you might not realize, but every cell phone can be used to make 911 calls, WITH OR WITHOUT a paid service plan. So for $20 you could use this as an emergency phone.
-
Shoot, $8 is $8 even if it takes months, what the heck, why not?
Thanks Matthew for the info - I installed it.
-
I should be clear on this -- it's not a lot of money. This is for unemployed teens, unemployed penniless millennials still living at home, etc.
I don't know, I think it's best suited for the employed who can get away with clicking random ads while doing their work. :smirk:
Some of us employed are too busy following CathInfo during working hours to click random ads. :wink:
-
Why will someone pay you 4 to 7 cents to click on a pop up window?
When someone is willing to give you something for nothing it means YOU are the product being sold.
-
How often do the ads appear? Do you get to choose if they pay you 4 or 7 cents for each?
-
Someone just "cashed out" from Qmee -- they got paid. Probably to their Paypal account. Free money!
Because of that, I earned $1 just now in my own Qmee account. Thanks!
I repeat:
http://qm.ee/29D82F4A (http://qm.ee/29D82F4A)
It's called Qmee.
It's very easy. You install a plug-in on your browser, and every so often a little window will open on the left side with links you can click on for 4 - 7cents. You click them, and every so often you can easily "cash out" right to your Paypal account.
I made 8 bucks so far. Considering how easy it was, I'm glad to have done it. 8 bucks is 8 bucks!
I wanted to try it out myself first -- well, I did. It's legit, it works, etc.
If you want to sign up, please use the link above.
-
Sounds like a tracking/marketing/privacy-risk scam
-
Sounds like a tracking/marketing/privacy-risk scam
No more than any online purchasing, "get paid to search", and other small-time money making opportunities.
Yes, they have some useless data on my online searching/shopping habits. Join the club, I say.
No, I don't care. It hasn't hurt me yet. And by "hurt me" I mean "suffered the smallest inconvenience".
At least with these guys, I get paid some money. When Google, Bing, Microsoft, Amazon, Wal-mart, etc. track my browsing and searching habits, I don't get a dime.
But as for this being an actual scam, I already told you it isn't. That much isn't open for debate.
-
Google, Bing, Microsoft, Amazon, Wal-mart, etc. track my browsing and searching habits
Not if you use uMatrix (https://github.com/gorhill/uMatrix/releases) and uBlock (https://github.com/gorhill/uBlock/releases/).