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Is it a scam for college students outside the university to sell pens?
It depends on the specific situation. On 20 16, there was a scam in which fraud gangs fled to several colleges and universities to recruit part-time jobs and sell stationery at low prices. Be careful of being cheated.

1, case content: 2065438+On June 4th, 2006, fraudsters used "eye-catching method" to trick girls into buying insufficient refills on the grounds of selling low-priced lamps, charging treasures and other items to college girls' dormitory students, thus defrauding students of money. After successfully committing crimes in many places, the victim girl recently called the police, and the police promptly attacked and arrested two members of the fraud gang.

2. The corresponding scam means: colleges and universities recruit stationery salesmen who study part-time. Stationery is provided by the company. Students can sell their stationery only by paying the cost, and the money earned belongs to the students themselves. The number of refills in the box is far less than the number marked on the box. The number marked on the box is 1000, but actually there are only over 200.

3. Deception psychology: Take advantage of students' inexperience and greed. The suspect jumped into high school and used low-priced desk lamps, charging treasures and other items to trick students into buying insufficient refills and defrauding students of money.

Extended data:

Anti-fraud skills:

1, establish anti-fraud psychology. Looking back on many telecom fraud cases, it can be said that many scams seem to be full of loopholes afterwards.

2. Improve anti-fraud awareness. It should be said that telecom fraud has evolved a lot, from "naive" means such as "guess who I am" to "accurate fraud" that can report the personal information of the victim. It's getting harder and harder to see through the scam at a glance.

3. Learn anti-fraud knowledge. At the source, develop good habits and avoid the disclosure of personal information. For example, some experts summed up "one card, two codes and three elements" and "four wants and three don't", including properly keeping bank cards, not sending SMS verification codes, and not "one password goes all over the world", which should become common sense.

People's Daily Online-Many colleges and universities were arrested for selling stationery at low prices.

People's Network-No matter how deep the routine is, I am not afraid.