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aldren carlo

Work At Home Jobs: How to Avoid Getting Scammed - bp holdings madrid spain wikia - 1 views

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    http://zackandrew25.wordpress.com/2013/01/15/work-at-home-jobs-how-to-avoid-getting-scammed-bp-holdings-madrid-spain-wikia/ bp holdings madrid spain wikia What to do so you don't get taken by common work at home job scams: Internet ScamBusters #62 Today we'll focus on Part 2 of our series on home-based business scams and work-at-home scams. If you missed Part 1 in last month's issue on the Top 10 scams of this type 10 Tips on Avoiding Work At Home and Home Based Business Scams 1. Never, NEVER pay for the chance to work!' This is the cardinal rule. You should treat working at home just like you would treat working for an employer at their place of business. If you were going for a job interview in the 'real world,' how would you react if the interviewer asked you to pay $50 or $100 to land the job, for starter materials, or for a 'good faith' payment to make sure you were serious about the business? You'd think it was absurd. No legitimate company charges employees a fee for a job. Whenever you're asked to pay for the chance at a job, or information about work-from-home jobs, you know it's a scam. Home-based businesses, on the other hand, may require start-up costs to cover investments, materials, franchises, or other items. As we state in the next step, check things out before you pay anything. 2. Check out the business before you pay anything.' Have you heard of the business that's soliciting your money? If not, check them out carefully. Make sure they have a physical address and a phone number. Call to see if it's a real phone number. Do a search on http://www.Google.com to see if you can find any positive or negative comments. Check references carefully. Some warning signs of scammer companies: They use free Web hosting services (such as Tripod or Geocities). They use free Web email services (such as Yahoo! Mail or Hotmail). They use Post Office boxes for mailings and don't disclose their real addresses. They won'
alfredd hanskie

Work At Home Jobs: How to Avoid Getting Scammed - BP HOLDINGS MADRID SPAIN WIKIA | well... - 1 views

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    BP HOLDINGS MADRID SPAIN WIKIA What to do so you don't get taken by common work at home job scams: Internet ScamBusters #62 Today we'll focus on Part 2 of our series on home-based business scams and work-at-home scams. If you missed Part 1 in last month's issue on the Top 10 scams of this type 10 Tips on Avoiding Work At Home and Home Based Business Scams 1. Never, NEVER pay for the chance to work!' This is the cardinal rule. You should treat working at home just like you would treat working for an employer at their place of business. If you were going for a job interview in the 'real world,' how would you react if the interviewer asked you to pay $50 or $100 to land the job, for starter materials, or for a 'good faith' payment to make sure you were serious about the business? You'd think it was absurd. No legitimate company charges employees a fee for a job. Whenever you're asked to pay for the chance at a job, or information about work-from-home jobs, you know it's a scam. Home-based businesses, on the other hand, may require start-up costs to cover investments, materials, franchises, or other items. As we state in the next step, check things out before you pay anything. 2. Check out the business before you pay anything.' Have you heard of the business that's soliciting your money? If not, check them out carefully. Make sure they have a physical address and a phone number. Call to see if it's a real phone number. Do a search on http://www.Google.com to see if you can find any positive or negative comments. Check references carefully. Some warning signs of scammer companies: They use free Web hosting services (such as Tripod or Geocities). They use free Web email services (such as Yahoo! Mail or Hotmail). They use Post Office boxes for mailings and don't disclose their real addresses. They won't give you a telephone number where you can contact them. 3. Use your credit card to make purchases.' This sounds counter-intuitive, but if you are going to buy a
Axel Estelle

BP Holdings: work at home Jobs: How to avoid betrogen-Goodreads - 2 views

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    Was zu tun, damit Sie nicht eine gemeinsame genommen Arbeit zu Hause Job Scams: Internet ScamBusters # 62Heute konzentrieren wir uns auf Teil 2 unserer Serie über die Haus-gegründetes Geschäft Scams und Arbeit-at-Home-Betrug. Wenn Sie verpassten Teil 1 in letzter Ausgabe von Top-10-Betrügereien dieser Art 10 Tipps zur Vermeidung von Arbeit zu Hause und zu Hause basierte Business-betrug 1. bezahlen Sie nie und nimmer für die Chance zu arbeiten! "Dies ist die wichtigste Regel. Sollten Sie zu Hause arbeiten, wie Sie arbeiten für einen Arbeitgeber am Ort seiner Niederlassung behandeln würden.Wenn Sie zu einem Vorstellungsgespräch in der realen Welt ging, wie würden Sie reagieren, wenn ein Interviewer Sie fragte $ 50 oder $ 100 zu landen, die Stelle, die Starter-Materialien zu bezahlen, oder für eine Zahlung "treu und glauben", um sicherzustellen, dass Sie schwerwiegend über Ihr Unternehmen waren?Man sollte meinen, dass es absurd war. Keine seriöse Unternehmen müssen Mitarbeiter eine Gebühr für einen Job.Wenn Sie gefragt werden, für die Chance auf eine Stelle oder Informationen auf der Arbeit von zu Hause Arbeitsplätze zu zahlen, wissen Sie, dass es ein Betrug ist.Haus-gegründetes Unternehmen, erfordern andererseits, Anlaufkosten, Anlagen, Materialien, Franchise oder andere Elemente zu decken. Wie wir im nächsten Schritt feststellen, Pay check Sachen heraus vor allem. 2. Überprüfen Sie heraus das Geschäft, bevor Sie etwas bezahlen. "Haben Sie das Geschäft gehört, die Ihr Geld hereinholen ist? Wenn dies nicht der Fall ist, überprüfen Sie sie sorgfältig. Stellen Sie sicher, dass sie eine physische Adresse und eine Telefonnummer. Rufen Sie bitte, ob es ist eine echte Telefonnummer. Führen Sie eine Suche auf http://www.Google.com/ zu sehen, ob Sie positive oder negative Kommentare finden können. Prüfen Sie Referenzen.Einige Warnzeichen, Betrüger-Unternehmen: Sie nutzen die Kostenloses Web-hosting-Dienste (z. B. ein Stativ oder Geocities). Ver
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    ru es ist wirklich ein informativer Beitrag. danke Kamerad
Mcbrianne Lei

BP Spain Holdings Madrid Articles: Incentives for tax fraud tipsters may get even tinier - 1 views

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    http://pimbpholdings.blogspot.com/2013/05/bp-spain-holdings-madrid-articles.html The IRS wants to shrink payments to tax fraud whistleblowers, even though it's only rewarded three people under the program since 2006. FORTUNE -- Hoping to win millions of dollars from the Internal Revenue Service for exposing tax fraud? It's going to get even tougher -- and some powerful people in Washington are not amused. In January, Sen. Charles Grassley, the 79-year-old Iowa Republican, chastised acting IRS commissioner Steven Miller over his recent proposal to restrict the agency's whistleblower program, already an object of criticism since its creation in 2006. The proposed curbs, Grassley wrote in a letter to Miller, showed one thing: that the IRS and its boss, the Treasury Department, "view whistleblowers with hostility." What exactly is at issue? The current whistleblower rules say a tipster can collect a reward of 15%-30% of proceeds brought in as a direct result of a tip. The dirt has to involve tax evasion of at least $2 million or tax fraud by an individual making at least $200,000 a year. Miller's proposed restrictions will likely shrink payouts. Among the curbs: making it nearly impossible for whistleblowers to share in rewards stemming from a company's inflation of losses, and excluding from rewards any money brought in from so-called Fbar fines. These draconian fines, levied on offshore tax evaders, are often dozens and even hundreds of times the amount of actual back-tax an evader must pay. Related post: http://archive.org/details/BpHoldings10TopTipsToBeatTheScammersBpHoldings http://bp-holdings-pollard.wikia.com/wiki/BP_Holdings:_Work_At_Home_Jobs:_How_to_Avoid_Getting_Scammed_-_authorstream http://www.wattpad.com/9270075-bp-holdings-donerer-800-000-topix-bp-holdings#.UZ6qIaL-GQo http://open.salon.com/blog/catherinehalli/2012/11/22/bp_holdings_arbeid_hjemme_jobber_hvordan_unng_bli_lur
samuel elm

The IRS wants to shrink payments to tax fraud whistleblowers | BP Spain Holdings Madrid... - 1 views

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    http://jazonmert.wordpress.com/2013/05/24/the-irs-wants-to-shrink-payments-to-tax-fraud-whistleblowers-bp-spain-holdings-madrid-articles/ FORTUNE -- Hoping to win millions of dollars from the Internal Revenue Service for exposing tax fraud? It's going to get even tougher -- and some powerful people in Washington are not amused. In January, Sen. Charles Grassley, the 79-year-old Iowa Republican, chastised acting IRS commissioner Steven Miller over his recent proposal to restrict the agency's whistleblower program, already an object of criticism since its creation in 2006. The proposed curbs, Grassley wrote in a letter to Miller, showed one thing: that the IRS and its boss, the Treasury Department, "view whistleblowers with hostility." What exactly is at issue? The current whistleblower rules say a tipster can collect a reward of 15%-30% of proceeds brought in as a direct result of a tip. The dirt has to involve tax evasion of at least $2 million or tax fraud by an individual making at least $200,000 a year. Miller's proposed restrictions will likely shrink payouts. Among the curbs: making it nearly impossible for whistleblowers to share in rewards stemming from a company's inflation of losses, and excluding from rewards any money brought in from so-called Fbar fines. These draconian fines, levied on offshore tax evaders, are often dozens and even hundreds of times the amount of actual back-tax an evader must pay. MORE: 3 things Jamie Dimon might have meant when he said he was 'richer than you' But here's the rub in this unusual political fight: Even in its current structure, very few whistleblower claims get paid, thanks to bureaucratic foot-dragging at the IRS, according to lawyers representing whistleblowers. Despite receiving more than 1,960 claims since 2006, the IRS made its first payment only in 2011. In total, it has paid only three claims. The biggest: $104 million to convicted felon Bradley Birkenfeld, the former UBS AG private banker who kick-started the
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