We’ve all seen headlines in search results like this one – “XYZ Exposed: Miracle Diet or Scam.” And perhaps we actually believed there was objective reporting or unbiased commentary behind the headline. But after reading the web page, it was clear that the headline was just a clever way to catch your attention and lure you to a sales page with an aggressive sales pitch. The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) has seen these headlines too, and the FTC doesn’t think they’re clever at all. In fact, the FTC believes they constitute deceptive and unfair trade practices, as indicated by the FTC’s accelerated crackdown on affiliates of a popular diet drink with aggressive weight loss claims. Modus Operandi The modus operandi of these sites was to start with attention grabbing headlines such as the one listed above and these additional ones – “News 6 News Alerts,” “Health News Health Alerts,” or “Health 5 Beat Health News.” The sites presented what appeared to be a skeptical commentator who raises the question of whether the diet drink is really effective. The commentator appeared to be objective; however, after a few paragraphs the commentator would conclude that use of the diet drink would result in a 25-pound weight loss in 4 weeks – all this without changing diet or exercise according to the FTC.
Forex Trade Affiliate Program
August 22, 2008 By Leave a Comment
This is an affiliate program from Forex-affiliate.com. They tell you from start that foreign trade is risky, so be carefull! They have two types of affiliate programs: one will give you a share of the sale, another one will give you a percent of the sale plus some residual income. You can try it clicking [...]














