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Posts by Shipman / Posting Activity: 1
I am: Student / United States 
Joined: Jul 09, 2014
Last Post: Jul 09, 2014
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Shipman   
Jul 09, 2014

As a student, we sometimes need to attend to other stuff, but school work hampers those efforts. The online writing industry has provided an easy way to get that good grade. However, fraudsters especially from Africa have manipulated innocent students from across the US into thinking they are legit with quality service and meaningless guarantees. Now we have a break, it only takes a minute or two to look up a website on WHOIS domain services and see who really is legit or not. I checked out a few and I was shocked; mypapergeek duped me, but I got them.

WHOIS WritingRelated: Getting facts from the website's registration details:

Some people like WB assume that just because it can extract a site`s registrants` details, it can out scams. What it doesn`t realize is that dudes outside of the US and UK are registering companies in the two countries whilst seated thousands of miles from London or, say, California. In fact, if I wanted to open a company right now, I`d just fish out my card, pay the required fees and I will have my company in a matter of days. I`d then have the laugh of my life as WB defends my US `based` company whilst I scam naïve students big time without any fear of legal retributions.

Further, these operatives have their associates in the US and UK who give these virtual companies a sense of `physical-ness` in the countries that they are registered. They just use a flat`s address as their physical address. In fact, these companies have an edge over `native` companies since they only pay a tiny fraction of what they earn as taxes; the rest is carted to different countries tax-free LOL

Outing frauds using only the `location` of a company as the slashing algorithm is a silly, meaningless, useless, bootless waste of time.
I`d rather head to the sea and start counting sand.


Related: Hidden website registration info for a research website - is it normal?

ok so i heard about one site and researched it a little...i looked up the whois info and then researched some of the info i found...it turns out it wasn't really the owner's info because they registered it through another company that's just for that purpose...anyway i guess since there's a business that other companies can register through that maybe its normal and no big deal, but i was wondering what you guys think about whether we should be wary of sites that either have private registration or registered through another company to hide their info
Shipman   
Jul 09, 2014

I have actually ordered with two of the companies to test their competency, paperdue.com and paperduenow.com. Though they are expensive, I cannot complain on the criminology module responses I have ordered from them. I was however scammed by one site, mypapergeek.com, and after looking up its credentials, it is a Kenyan fraudsite...verify from WHOIS and you can verify any website to know their location, IP address and other things.