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Affiliate Scam Challenge

February 28th, 2005 by Jeff Molander

Welcome to my Affiliate Scam Challenge. Simply click on the two links below and you will be taken to two merchant Web sites. The challenge is to

A) Determine which is real and which is fake without cliking beyond the landing page.

B) List off characteristics that tipped you off as to which was a fake merchant site.

URL one

URL two

Were you able to guess the fake site… set up by our very own Federal Trade Commission? How did you fare and what tipped you off?

14 Comments

Craig said:

Sundae Station… basically because of no copyright or privacy statement.

Both the URL and site design on URL 1 are very suspect.

However, what’s with the Yahoo email address for Golden Survey? Whenever I see a company using a free email account it immediately throws up a red flag. I guess a real fake Affiliate would know that…

C) All of the above.

Carolyn Tang said:

A) Sundae Station

B) No privacy policy, no contact information, use of “no risk” and “guaranteed” terminology.

Hi, Carolyn:

you mean to tell me you’ve never seen those words on a merchant’s / advertiser’s site? :)

Carolyn Tang said:

Ah-HA, very good segue. Lure me in with a fun game, and yet, there’s a moral catch. Thanks, Dad.

Okay, so you’re really examining how does a merchant feel about an affiliate using such terminology to drive traffic to the merchant?

At my current job, and at my prior job, we did crack down on affiliates who misled consumers. However, it needed to be a joint effort between affiliate and search channels. Search would usually discover the violation and notify us.

LOL. Please keep in mind, everyone, these are “merchant/advertiser” sites.

J Mopar said:

What do I win if I get the right answer?

James Dorans said:

An addition to Carolyn Tang’s comment. Also the affiliate networks should help detect affiliate scams.

Michael said:

Sundae Station is the fake. The Sub-URL is what gave it away to me. No contact data - the verbage used seemed so hype. Stating the generalized industry dollar values of the over-all. Calculators where-by you make up your own pie in the sky earnings. There is a ton of indicators within the text alone. When it seems to good to be true, it is to good to be true!

Mandy Haga said:

Sundae Station. It doesn’t have a direct domain and the idea is , well, ridiculous. I wouldn’t do Golden Survey either. Paying to join screams old school mlm and probably is a scam itself.

Brad Waller said:

It’s obvious. Only link B has an affiliate program.

And of course, B has links to a Members Area, FAQ, Contact us, and Privacy page.

Finally, in all my years I have never heard of anything like the Sundae Factory, yet I know of many get paid for surveys “programs”. So, knowing that surveys are an oft-used “scheme” and popular, this means that the site is not a fake. That said, I’m not going to say anything about how legit it is…

GearGuy said:

With just a quick glance I thought Sundae Station. The no copyright and privacy policy tipped me off.

Jim Lillig said:

Sundae Station, the URL was the big tipoff. No privacy policy and no copyright. Cheesy graphics aside, it seems a little far fetched that you can dispense scoops of ice cream in an untended environment. If you search farther into the site, it also claims that elves make the ice cream. I can’t believe that my tax dollars are spent on crap like this. Pork barrell is alive and well, maybe that will be their next site, Pork Barrell Pork Rinds - You don’t need ‘em, just shut up and eat ‘em.

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