Posted on 11/17/2016 3:05:36 PM PST by nickcarraway
Search on Facebook for secret sister gift exchange and youll find people posting and re-posting the same message over and over again. The message claims you can buy a gift for $10 or more, add your name to a list and then receive a bounty of 36 gifts. A lot of friends are doing it, or at least posting about it. Doesnt sound like a good idea, Lauren Kidwell said.
Kidwell said secret sister sounds a whole lot like a pyramid scam she saw years ago. You only spend $10, get one gift for someone else. Everybody else sends you one. Doesnt make sense, she explained.
University of South Florida mass communications instructor Kelli Burns knows all about the secret sister gift exchange. Ive seen it on Facebook. A couple of my friends are participating, Burns said.
This is a typical pyramid scheme. Were just seeing this on Facebook this time instead of the old way of using letters, and Facebook allows it to spread a lot faster, she added.
The biggest problem with the post is its illegal. United States Post Office regulations are very clear about pyramid schemes, and these gifts are being sent through the mail.
Its also problematic because your personal information is posted on Facebook. Its against Facebooks terms of agreement. So theres the potential that Facebook, if they got wind of this, could block your account, Burns said.
But its so enticing, especially when you see your friends doing it, and inviting you to join in. The chances of you getting 36 gifts are very slim. And what are you gonna get? A bunch of junk that you probably dont want anyway, Burns said.
You’d think the Secret Nigerian Sister thing
would have been a dead giveaway.
HAHA...at the end this lady states that the ones she gives the peppers to that feed the needy are REPUBLICANS,...and we really are a good lot but we voted for the biggest worstest in the entire world RACIST...hahahaha.
Back in prehistoric times, we called these chain letters.
Sound likes those chain letters that go around saying to send a dollar to the top names on the list and mail out so many more letters and you would get a bunch of dollars in return.
Pyramid schemes seem to get recycled, and can show up again in slightly different forms. That’s what this looks like.
Some gullible people just can’t resist a good con.
This stuff didn’t happen when women weren’t allowed to vote.
Just a thought.
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