sean <s-e-a-n-h-a-r-d-y-8-8-@-y-a-h-o-o.c-o.u-k> wrote in message news:<4116a939$0$20246$(E-Mail Removed)>...
> SPAM SPAM SPAM SPAM SPAM SPAM SPAM SPAM SPAM SPAM SPAM SPAM
Actually, change the P in "SPAM" to a C, and you'll see
what Juiceboosted really is. A scam. It is not only
technologically impossible (about like trying to
squeeze a watermelon down a garden hose), but also
so in a business sense. Based on the number of potential
subscribers, the "company" would have to pay out an
amount greater than the National Debt of the US.
Juiceboosted has now been Googlebombed: if you
Google for "juice boosted", the first and second
hits point to a forum thread on the scam in:
http://www.dslreports.com/forum/rema...7043~mode=flat
and a front page news item about the scam:
http://www.dslreports.com/shownews/51529
The affiliates of this scam, to quote a user at
http://www.scam.com/ named Fraudbuster are
reacting
"like someone being deprogrammed from a cult."
The entire scam.com forum thread is one for
Orville Redenbacher (NG regulars will under-
stand what I mean by this), with the
affiliates refusing to believe that it was
a scam, even when faced with cold and hard
evidence otherwise. Some even threw out red
herrings to confuse the matter or engaged
in personal attacks against the other users
(Erik in particular was doing the latter).
It eventually prompted one of Broadband
Reports' editors, Karl Bode, to join scam.com
and post. That shut the affiliates up (but
they may have continued, since the last time
I visited the scam.com thread was Sunday.)