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This scheme also has a variation for parents, where participants send out children’s books to one person on the list and receive as many as thirty-six books back. The U.S. Postal Inspection Service has really taken up this cause on Facebook: they’re the experts, since in decades past people used the mail to send their chain letters. (That’s how people circulated advance-fee frauds, too.) In days past, these schemes may have circulated to solicit postcards, cash, or just letters so children could receive some mail. The USPIS explains why pyramid schemes are a terrible idea unless you are literally the person who started the chain. Note: we are not encouraging you to start a pyramid scheme or chain letter.
I don’t care how many Facebook friends you have: you can’t convince everyone in the United States to mail a children’s book or a $10 gift to a random stranger. As it happens, though, these chains are also against Facebook’s terms of service, which bar users from passing around chain letters or other misleading and illegal schemes. Don’t hit “share.” Don’t say, “LOL, you never know!” as you put your own kid’s name and home address on the list and send it out to strangers. Don’t perpetuate pyramid schemes. Secret Sisters Gift Exchange [Snopes] |
- by Laura Northrup
- via Consumerist
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