Newly created PTC NeroBux is pretty much being advertised everywhere, and I investigated what made them different from NeoBux, BuxOut or SandraClicks. and I found out why.
I visited their website, and found out that they’ve introduced gambling into their scheme. But, that absolutely shatters the aspect of Get Paid To. PTC are meant to make you money, not risk it or lose it. And, the one thing that is funny about it, is that people still carry on and promote it like it’s nothing different.
Investing money and losing it isn’t much of a gamble, as it’s really if you click ads when it comes to PTC. If you can commit your time to make your money, the rest will follow. That’s how it really goes, hence why PayPal agree to allow PTCs on a very strict term basis.
Having the opportunity to gamble disgusts me, because at the end of day, this can be totally tortured. The website doesn’t have any sort of major network backing them up, such as VeriSign, McAfeeSecure, Safe or HackerSheild. Every major gambling site like PKR.com have all the major security brands backing them up, even though it’s “just” gambling. I’d never gamble with a website like that, because the ratio to winning could be 0 and in short terms you would “just” be giving them money and you wouldn’t even be knowing it. Thus, scamming their users into thinking they’ve got a chance to win a jackpot.
If you expect that sites who offer more gambling into their PTC, you need to learn that they “may” be honest but the Internet has never given true identity. Nobody actually knows whos on the other side of the computer, so you need to sincerely know that everything you see can’t always be true (though you’d like to be). Remember, If a lot of other people have “won” the jackpot of $10,000 or whatever their can always be issues. It might just be the owner himself who pretended to “won”, or the owner could change the chances of winning lower whenever he feels like it. And you can’t do a dime about it, because at the end of the day - you agreed to the sites Terms Of Service. About 99.99% of sites always mention that “they have the right to modify their terms of service” in their disclaimers and policies. Even information sites have Terms Of Service now, regardless that in no way is it necessary.
So, keep an eye out. I’d advise you just go for sites that are backed up by major companies like VeriSign, McAfeeSecure, Safe and/or HackerShield. It just shows a little bit of trust and they would only invest that kind of money into those security services if they knew that everybody would win. I know, a tough lock, but that’s how it goes really. VeriSign holds the sites data and has warranty of upto $100,000 so you’ve always got something to fall back on. Ideas never run out, but a lot of peoples creativity and minds are disintegrating … fast.


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