Dailyconsumeralerts.com Review is it a Scam
It’s very interesting for me to see a website like Dailyconsumeralerts.com. A few years ago myself and few others named webpages like Dailyconsumeralerts.com as fake news websites well they’ve seemed to evolve the idea and evolved themselves into legit ‘advertorial websites’ promoting every single fishy business the internet has to offer. From working at home jobs to Government grants, to E-cigarettes, debt bailouts, wrinkle free creams and penny auctions dailyconsumeralerts.com recommends you buy them all.
If you’re recommended to purchasing a product using Dailyconsumeralerts.com do your research first
Now I’d like to go on the offensive and simple say don’t trust Dailyconsumeralerts.com but that wouldn’t be fair plus there’s no way of telling what Dailyconsumeralerts.com might evolve into next. So what I will say is if your money is important to you make sure you do research before handing over your credit card. Dailyconsumeralerts.com is not a real news website if you look at the top it says that it’s nothing more than an advertorial. An advertorial means that its sole purpose to sell you something; there is lots of website that do this but most of them don’t pose as news websites.
Final thoughts on Daily consumer alerts
I won’t call it a scam but understand that its sole purpose is to get you buy something it’s not there to help you. Also again realize that it’s not a real news website it’s an advertorial, before signing up with any of its recommendations I recommend that you do your research first, at the date I’m writing this which is August 2011 I don’t recommend you sign up with any of their recommended products.
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I do not understand why this website does not provide any option of using PayPal for payment. I cannot justify providing my credit card information.
In response to L. Downs I agree Dailyconsumeralerts.com looks very suspicious!
Just read a “report” on this site for a weight loss product, then skipped around, googled it, went back and found the same exact words and pictures promoting a different product. And the author claims she lost 25 pounds in four weeks…I think not!
I went on this site this morning, a friend sent it to me, and the article was about pro-slim… just went back to check out the product name again and it’s the same exact article, but now it’s Pure Berry Max. I can’t stop shaking my head. The lengths that people with go to make a buck is ridiculous.
I clicked on a link advertised on my Facebook page that offered a free trial for SkinDM and another rejuvenating cream – the photos showed a woman looking 20 years younger after using the cream. It was free, so I thought I would apply for it until it wanted my Debit Card details to pay the postage – then I thought I should look in the small print at the bottom of the page and it stated that if you do not return the cream after 14 days they will charge your card £ 56.00 (approx.). It made me suspicious enough not to apply for the “free” trial. I doubt the claims made are honest either after seeing how they try to conceal the fact they will charge you for the product after 14 days in the small print. Please note, I clicked on the contact page and the above site came up – although it was a different website skindm.com and another called collagenta.com