How bad do rebill offers hurt people?

pmarshall76

New member
Jul 26, 2009
48
0
0
I'm new here. Just wondering rather I should keep promoting rebill offers (government grants, teeth whitening, etc.) How much money do these offers actually take from people who sign up for them? I been hearing really bad things about them. Can these things do enough damage to drop peoples credit scores, throw them in debt, or perhaps kill themselves for all I know?
 


Shipping & handling applies. I've seen it go from $1.00-$7.50 for the typical rebills (bizopp + health/beauty) -- I don't think you can get into debt from an $80 charge. I always say, it's the consumer at fault for not reading the terms -- esp. now more than ever since we have to be more clear (bolding, bigger text, highlighting, centering) in the TOS. If you're making good clean money pushing there rebills w/out the FTC on your case, keep on banking.
 
government grants, teeth whitening, acai....i usually get around 30 bucks per sale

To answer your question, it depends on the offer. Some offers sign the person up for 2 or 3 additional rebills and in general they pay between 70 and 150 a month for one or more "services"

If you really want to answer your own question, sign up for your offers and find out. At the very least, you should read the Terms and Conditions of shit you are pushing.
 
Hello friend,

I no think should worry.

I think that rebill offer general charge under $100 month.

I hear most American spend over $100 month on Starbucks coffee so no think it that bad.

Good luck bro
 
To answer your question, it depends on the offer. Some offers sign the person up for 2 or 3 additional rebills and in general they pay between 70 and 150 a month for one or more "services"

If you really want to answer your own question, sign up for your offers and find out. At the very least, you should read the Terms and Conditions of shit you are pushing.

Seconded, some will sell your data to a 3rd party which will most likely push some more rebills to you.
 
My feeling is if the offer is on the network, run it. Who's to say what's worthy of running something or not... If the network has the decency to make it available for affiliates, we's got to make teh monies
 
Yeah the sheeple are not getting much smarter, in fact they may be even getting dumber. Rebills do hurt peoples bank accounts and credit scores as they get charged $5.99 then before they can cancel they get hit with another fee of $50-$70. After this they make it real hard to get it canceled and they try to charge it again in a month or whenever. People should read the fine print though.
 
they get charged $5.99 then before they can cancel they get hit with another fee of $50-$70. After this they make it real hard to get it canceled and they try to charge it again in a month or whenever. People should read the fine print though.

This is truly fascinating, I had no idea. Are you sure about this? Please quote your sources and post some kind of appendix for my immediate review and analysis.