numemail

After writing a review of Numenmails.com instead of Numenmail.com,
which was the actual request (I like to think of it as a comic blunder) hype has built as to whether Numenmail will be worth the wait. Lets find out!

I’m afraid to say it took me about 2 seconds to decide that Numenmail falls into the internet scams category. What made this such a fast decision was this on the homepage:

numenmail-internet-scams

Quite why they put that in such big writing is beyond me. Numenmail presumably think that is a selling point when it the exact opposite. If anything has a minimum payout of more than $200 then it’s almost defiantly a scam; even $100 is pushing it for a PTR site because most pay low rates and unless you could refer a great many people it could take months to reach that amount.

In case you are an optimist/live in a fairyland then $8888 would seem to be a reasonable payout given that each email is apparently “worth $80″. That would mean you would make $8888 from reading 112 emails, something you could easily do in a few hours if they sent you enough e-mails. Sounds ridiculous? There’s more…

Numenmail proved they have a sense of humour by plastering this line across their homepage:

honest-mebers.png

Who decides if members are honest? God? Santa?

General scam signs
As usual there is the option to ‘upgrade’ to get free referrals and a few other ‘bonuses’. This costs $25 and is defiantly not worth it because you wont get paid the earnings from your referrals.

This line in their TOS made me laugh, “Any member sending us gibberish will result in automatic termination of account”… but I was really looking forward to sending them gibberish!

Conclusion
It should be pretty obvious by now that Numenmail is an Internet scam. Their claim to have paid out 890,991,712.00 (USD?) doesn’t help their case. These signs can be used to recognise most internet scams, have you ever been fooled by a similar site?