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Online Scams and Program Failures
The rate of failure of online programs is monumental. While a great number of failures are due to fraudulent intents of some promoters and other practitioners, several of them come about unplanned as a result of innocent real-life imperfections. Most online programs are based on the principle of "other things being equal", as is the case with all economic projections. Unfortunately, this condition doesn't hold in a preponderance of cases. This is even truer of all the online programs designed by computer gurus and programmers, who have reduced all elements and variables to the values and intelligence of a computer. In real life, things don't work that smoothly. The slightest variation from assumed positions will disrupt the whole "theoretical" program outcomes. That explains why almost all ambitious programs fail in their thousands before they reach mid-life. Who do we blame for the failures? Is it the program designers/programmers, who have worked very hard using their rare intellects and relying on the accuracy of their product? Is it the program administrators or executors, whose duty it is to turn theories into practice within the context of the real life situations? Is it the program's final users or consumers who have been too 'impatient' or too 'unbelieving' or too 'lazy' to allow the underlying assumptions to hold? All of them have a share in the blame; they all are over- ambitious and over-optimistic. If all parties concerned try and moderate their assumptions and expectations, there would be fewer online program failures. Some program promoters, designers and administrators did not set out to be fraudulent, but when the table of reality turns against them, they earn the appellation of "scammers". This group of innocent scammers deserve some pity because they too must have lost their money in their honest quest to earn a decent living off their brains and efforts. However, the intentional online scammers and fraudsters are the real polluters of the internet. They deserve no mercy. All efforts of progress-loving individuals, groups and governments should be applied to identify them and make them bear the appropriate burden of their wickedness. I have been scammed several times since I started my innocent journey into online business opportunities. I have fallen for both the intentional and the innocent scammers alike. I feel bad indeed for having my simple mind assailed. While I forgive the innocent scammers, for "they know not what they do", God should forgive me for having no heart to forgive the intentional scammers among the lot. God knows them. |
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This intel was contributed by gembiz

gembiz
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May, 2012
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