Sandi Xsc

This review is from a real person who provided valid contact information and hasn't been caught misusing, spamming or abusing our website. Check our FAQ

Verified Reviewer

We were ripped off $550

stars-rating-full stars-rating-full stars-rating-full stars-rating-full stars-rating-full
Business Com - We were ripped off $550
Business Com - We were ripped off $550 - Image 2

He's selling Los Angeles dodger tickets that he does not have he ripped me and my sister off for $550. He keeps reposting I keep reflagging and he's allowed to continue to do it this man should be blocked.

And there's another one named Nate better ripping people off there needs to be a way to stop this. Don't buy any tickets on Craigslist

View full review
Loss:
$550

Preferred solution: Full refund

Anonymous

Business.com FRAUD

we were using them for lead generation. We payed $33 per lead. Basically, about 50% of the leads that they sent us, when called said that the contact doesnt work there and they have no idea why 100 people are calling them trying to sell them stuff. When we contacted business.com they asked "why we were so upset about $33" when we told them A. that it is fraud, and b. if i were to sell someone something but not deliver on it it is FRAUD. C. its not just $33 we counted 8 leads in 2 months alone totaling over $250 that were fraudulent they replied that they would not issue a credit. needless to say we cancelled our business.com account and are debating pursuing this matter further.

And besides that, most of the leads that actually get me to a person are not really leads. I would say we would get 1 true lead for every 20-30.

Just want to steer anyone else away from making the same mistake we did.

View full review
Loss:
$250
1 comment
Guest

Found the same thing to be true. 30 leads and all but 1 were legitimate. Were not delivering quality leads and false claims of delivering quality leads.

Media Expert Talks

Disinformation: Russian and Chinese trolls among us

Disinformation: Russian and Chinese trolls among us

Jun 16, 2022

How to know what’s fake on social media? In this video, Prof. Darren Linvill from Clemson University Media Forensics Hub explains how disinformation works, common tactics of political propaganda, the role of trolls, hashtags, and how to spot fake news.

Prof. Darren Linvill
Prof. Darren Linvill

Darren Linvill investigates data messaging and context accompanied by inauthentic behavior on social media networks. He also examines misinformation and disinformation in the rising field of social media forensics and data monitoring.

Why Trust Reviews on PissedConsumer?

  • Professional auto and live moderation
  • 100% user-generated content
  • Equal opportunity and protection
  • Zero tolerance for fake reviews
  • Verified content
  • PissedConsumer is on the Inc. 5000 list

For more information read Blog article