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Friday, November 1, 2013

Fake online dating profile scams exposed

Tricks find When People are faking in there Online Dating Profile





All online dating people must read this blog and try to find all lies. The trauma caused by online dating scams is worse than any other, because the victims experienced double hit – loss of money and loss of romantic relationship hit.

Fake online dating profile scams exposed

 
Please share your experience to help others too.

Research has indicated that as much as 90 percent of people lie in their online dating profiles. Women in their 20s and 30s slyly deduct anywhere from five to 20 lbs. from their weight, while men tend to lie about income, education level and, yes, relationship status. Yikes.

Here, we count the ways regular folks get creative while creating sexier versions of them online.

 

Lie number 1: I am tall, dark and handsome.



Translation:

I’m average in height, looks and style. Simply … average. Nothing more, nothing less.”
Yup, according to Medical News Today, 52.6 percent of men lie about their height online; 39 percent of women do the same. So if you’re expecting someone tall, dark and handsome, think again. When it comes to internet dating, you’re lucky if your date shows up with a couple of hands and a tongue.



Fake online dating profile scams exposed

Lie number 2: I’m slim and petite or tall and well-built.


Translation:

 I was slim and petite or tall and well-built 15 years ago. I haven’t accepted the fact that I’m no longer a skinny, sexy young thing, and I know that potential dates won’t accept it either, so I take liberties with my self-description and hope you won’t notice the additional 20+ lbs. of jelly I’ve accumulated since the days when my profile photos were taken.”


Lie number 3: I am 29



Translation:

I am an old pro at sites like these, and I know that lowering my age to under-30 will help me turn up in more people’s searches. In reality, I’m getting really sick of not having any luck on these inline websites and, oh yeah, I’m anywhere between the ages of 35 and 50.

 

Lie number 4: As the CEO of a successful internet start-up, I enjoy the finer things in life.



Translation:

As the founder of a bare-bones mail order business that I run out of my mother’s basement, I enjoy spending every waking second of my time on the internet, watching porn, gambling, and living vicariously through my avatar on SecondLife.com.



Lie number 5: I am sensitive, smart and funny



Translation: I am hyper-sensitive, a pretentious wannabe-intellectual and I just might have Tourette’s syndrome, which makes people laugh sometimes.


Lie number 6: I make more than $350,000 per year.


Translation:

I have grandiose fantasies of winning the lottery or striking gold with an internet porn empire … but for now, to make ends meet, I’m your friendly neighbourhood manager at Walgreen.

Salary is one of the biggest things people — especially men — lie about in their profiles. According to Scientific American, men claiming incomes of more than $250,000 got 151 percent more replies than men claiming incomes less than $50,000. Ugh.

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