I say virtually because it does take ten minutes or so of your time every week. To me, that's free money.
What is this free money I speak of? Well, I would like to introduce you to Survey Savvy. It's a pyramid scheme that really works. You take surveys, you get paid. Your referrals take surveys, you get paid. Their referrals take surveys, you get paid. Every once in a while I click over to check my balance, and usually I have about $20 or so waiting to be mailed to me. I request a check probably about every three months. It's not a full-time job or anything, but upwards of $80 a year in sweet, sweet, (virtually) free cash is, well, sweet!
So, the reason I want to tell you about it out of the blue today is because this time when I clicked over, I have to tell you my balance was waaahaayyy over $20. There must be a lot of you who have clicked the link in my sidebar, so thankyouthankyouthankyou peeps! Anyone who hasn't ever clicked the link and signed up, CLICK HERE for goodness sakes and get yourself your own SWEET (virtually)FREE CASH.
Disclaimer:
I am not being renumerated for advertising by Survey Savvy in any way. I just think it's an awesome deal and it works for me. You don't have to give away a ton of information or anything, in case you worry about such things (I don't). I have been signed up for about four years, and I know the wife of the developer, so I can say it's totally legit.
This sounds a bit like Alladvantage http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AllAdvantage
ReplyDeleteBack in the wild wild days of the internet they used to pay you to surf the web while viewing ads. It too had a pyramid scheme where you would get paid a cut of those under you. When I was a young computer scientist unaware of the ethical ramifications of the skills I had been given, my friends and I wrote a program to move the mouse cursor around the screen to fool the program into thinking there was someone surfing the web. Soon, the friend I signed up under was signing people under us and running the program for everyone. We made good money until we finally considered the ethics behind our scheme.