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#1
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We had a couple show up at our club with an email indicating the husband
had bought a glider ride through an online company devoted to thrill event sales. The email indicated they had contacted our club, talked with our president, and made an appointment for a flight at 1:00pm. No such contact had been made, we did not recognize the name of the company, and we called the whole endeavor into question. The husband called that company, which wanted to pay us via their company credit card. We don't take credit cards and we refused to talk to the company. They then told the husband that they would refund his payment and we suggested he refuse payment of that fee when billed by his card company. He was happy with that when we told him that our charge would be $99 instead of the $175 he had authorized on his card. Apparently there are at least two companies and maybe more making these third-party sales on line. I have heard that at least one of them is a scam and I would be reluctant to accept any such arrangement unless it were made through SSA. |
#2
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This problem should be fairly well know. For example see
http://glidersailplanerides.com and http://www.funjumper.com/skyride for some info on these jerks. http://glidersailplanerides.com was started by glider FBOs annoyed by this scam. www.1800SKYRIDE.com is the biggest scammer but they have many many related sites and domain names including www.thrillplanet.com they hide behind. They started scamming for parachute jumps and I believe the USPA kicked even them out. Their "customer problems" (i.e. scam) for parachute jumps even got featured at least twice on local TV in Atlanta although coverage was pretty soft. See for example http://www.myfoxatlanta.com/myfox/pa...Y&pageId=1.1.1 Unfortuantely companies like Google make money running their scam ads and approaches to Google to do something about this have got to the right group but they have declined to do anything claiming there has not been enough consumer complaints. Apparently "do no evil" is easy if you keep your head buried in the sand, or somewhere else dark. The worst thing an FBO or club can do is to try to honor scam gift coupons, that just helps these scammers continue. Clubs and FBOs could help by noting on their web site they don't take certain gift coupons and having themselves listed on http://glidersailplanerides.com and can link to that site off their home page. Warnings on the SSA web site about this would be helpful, I'm not sure where efforts to get that done ever went. Darryl On Jun 11, 10:48 am, Nyal Williams wrote: We had a couple show up at our club with an email indicating the husband had bought a glider ride through an online company devoted to thrill event sales. The email indicated they had contacted our club, talked with our president, and made an appointment for a flight at 1:00pm. No such contact had been made, we did not recognize the name of the company, and we called the whole endeavor into question. The husband called that company, which wanted to pay us via their company credit card. We don't take credit cards and we refused to talk to the company. They then told the husband that they would refund his payment and we suggested he refuse payment of that fee when billed by his card company. He was happy with that when we told him that our charge would be $99 instead of the $175 he had authorized on his card. Apparently there are at least two companies and maybe more making these third-party sales on line. I have heard that at least one of them is a scam and I would be reluctant to accept any such arrangement unless it were made through SSA. |
#4
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The irony here is... by posting to newsgroups with the web addresses
to these scam websites, you are actually INCREASING the chance they will turn up when someone searches google for "glider ride"! Google (and other search engines) use a variety of proprietary methods to determine page relevance. The number of times that website address appears on OTHER websites is one of the key factors for determining how "good" that website is. It is kind of like a popularity contest. So when you post to a newsgroup about scam sites, you do NOT want to include their address in the typical http://www.google.com/ format! If you must include the website address, it is better to do it something like this: www [dot] 1800skyride [dot] com That way you aren't increasing the likelihood that they will get MORE search engine hits. |
#5
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![]() I really would not worry about this, spreading the word is much more important. Lets worry about getting some of the anti-spam sites up high in the listings by promoting them/linking to them from FBO and club sites. The 1800Skyride scumbag scammers are already rankied in the top few search terms by Google and others and often list in the top one and two paid results on Google. You are unlikely to change this already high ranking. I would be much more worried about being clear which @##holes you are warning people about. Especially for public web sites I would provide links to the scammer sites surrounded by clear warnings that these link to scams but I'd link to the anti- scam sites first and most clearly. For the scam pages a redirect to a bounce page warning the next page is a scam is a great thing to do as well. And if you are bored you can look on their web site (www. 1800skyride.com) for photos of your glider or photos from your club/ FBO site they have stolen. One of my club's gliders and Drew's Duo "HGC" are shown there and he is definitly not doing rides for them. Darryl On Jun 16, 11:03 am, Jim Little wrote: The irony here is... by posting to newsgroups with the web addresses to these scam websites, you are actually INCREASING the chance they will turn up when someone searches google for "glider ride"! Google (and other search engines) use a variety of proprietary methods to determine page relevance. The number of times that website address appears on OTHER websites is one of the key factors for determining how "good" that website is. It is kind of like a popularity contest. So when you post to a newsgroup about scam sites, you do NOT want to include their address in the typicalhttp://www.google.com/format! If you must include the website address, it is better to do it something like this: www [dot] 1800skyride [dot] com That way you aren't increasing the likelihood that they will get MORE search engine hits. |
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Beat the "EASY-MONEY" online scams | RastafarianWarrior | Home Built | 2 | May 21st 05 10:59 PM |