About This Blog

Many new Freelancers who are new to the Freelancing world will start with searches for Freelance Writing Jobs or even Freelance Typing Jobs. However, while some freelancing platforms have done all they could to facilitate our freelancing jobs, there is not much that can be done about scammers who register themselves as buyers for your services and later on, ghosts you completely when they need to pay you.

Of course, we will not want these scammers to run away scot-free after we have put in hours and hours of work. This blog features all the articles that have been scammed from our scammy employers with no intentions of tarnishing the names of the clients who bought writing services from the scammers. All we have to note is that if you are one of these clients and you have obtained an article that you have seen as listed on this blog, take note that you have employed someone who, in turn, employed new freelance writers and took advantage of their skills.

The articles here are the final work which were completed - and 'scammy-employer-approved' - but have gone unpaid. If you have received any of these pieces of write-ups, please leave a comment under the blog post about the seller's details. More people should be warned about the scam freelancing jobs so that they can be safe from scammers.

Product reviews you see on this blog should not be trusted since they are paid content and are written without any study on the actual quality of the products. Most of the work here were done based on given set of keywords, title, number of words required and that was it. So if you read a product review on this page, do not trust it.

Here's the reasons why this blog is set up:

Freelancers that are scammed can share their experiences and details of the scammer - their IDs, e-mail addresses, Skype handles etc. Other freelancers that (hopefully) see the details here with a simple Google search will be able to avoid taking up the projects, report the project and the user as well. The more we know about them, the better we can protect new freelancers.

If these scammers were to submit our works to their own clients and get paid for it, a simple plagiarism scan of the articles will give a 100% match with this blog's contents - provided that our works are submitted as it is without any alterations to the clients. Most scammers won't bother rewriting our articles because they 'need a quick turnaround for those articles'. We hope that the client will realize that they are getting scammed works and stop working with the scammers, or perhaps refuse to pay them as well. After all, most companies will not want to use written content that can be found with high plagiarism rates from other sites.

Freelancer.com is especially ineffective at blocking off scammers - projects to help them open 10s or 20s (sometimes even 50 or more) of new Freelancer.com accounts or Google accounts are often posted on the site, and minimal verification is required for these scammers to post their jobs. We hope that this site will shed some light on the type of articles and tactics that scammers typically go for.

In any case, if you know anything about the scammers or have encountered some of your own, please do let us know via the comment section or the contact form. Alternatively, you can e-mail me at loverdyllmerrilyn@gmail.com for more details.