Any. Interchangeable. Nonsensical. But again with a bow! And another car. There are supposedly 3 cars that you can win on a Facebook page. We say: BULLSHIT!

We've seen many bows come and go, even this week! In these cases, there were fake competitions on Facebook that only wanted to create interaction and in the end lured the participants into any affiliate competition that had nothing to do with the status report on Facebook. And based on the structure, you could almost think that the same person is behind all these competitions on different sites with very similar page titles.

To make it clear again: these status reports on Facebook only serve as bait; you are the decoy into which a commission link is often packaged. In this case, the alleged competition is all the more interesting because it even mentions a car dealership that supposedly gave the vehicles up for raffle.

image

And here too you can read in the description:

MIMIKAMADanger ! We received 3 brand new Audis in silver, black and white from the Böblingen car dealership for a raffleMIMIKAMA

The 3 lucky winners will be announced on April 1st.

what you have to do to take part!
This is how you take part:
MIMIKAMA ➡️ Step 1: Share this post
MIMIKAMA ➡️ Step 2: Like our page (not the post/photo)
MIMIKAMA ➡️ Step 3: Comment which color you want.

MIMIKAMA(y)MIMIKAMA ❗️All 3 steps are necessary to participate.MIMIKAMA ❗️

The lucky winners will be chosen on April 1st and contacted via private message.

This competition has no connection to Facebook and is not sponsored by Facebook.

#audi #competition #free #autohausböblingen #audicenter

And should we tell you something? We in the Mimikama office were so crazy and simply called the Audi dealership in Böblingen . In what was probably the most pleasant phone call of the year, we found out that they didn't know anything about any new cars that had been given away for a raffle on Facebook.

In this respect, the author of the status report has already written nonsense.

These competition pages always follow the same pattern: like, share, comment.

These are the three interactions with which a page achieves the most reach on Facebook without having to place paid advertising on Facebook. Of course there are competition guidelines issued by Facebook, but the creators of such pages are of little or no interest in these and Facebook itself does not react here either. There isn't even a separate reporting function/option that a user could use for this. From a legal point of view, these competitions do not run correctly either, as there are no conditions of participation, contact information or legal notice.

Even more doubts:

If you look at the “Info” tab on this page, you should find a contact and an imprint there. But the information has absolutely nothing to say. You can't find an organizer, no contact person, nothing at all. They just made the effort and included some pseudo-nonsense text. However, there is no information about the organizer.

image

In this case we can say more than clearly: no one will win a new Audi on this Facebook page.

So what – a click like that doesn’t cost anything!

Yes, that's right. A click on tempting competition sites usually doesn't cost you anything (as long as it's not a subscription trap behind it). If you define “it costs nothing” purely in terms of material values, then it will probably be that way.

But something can cost more than just money, because what it costs you here is priceless: it costs you your dignity - it costs you your credibility.

It costs you your name when you take part in sleazy competitions that you know deep down are rubbish, but your desire is so great that you end up clicking.

It is your inner compulsion to which you succumb and all people can see your defeat - they can all see that you have given in to the hollow temptation. And it would be easy for us to publicly pillory you here. Everyone would see your avatar and your name, because you have immortalized yourself there and shown that you have dedicated yourself to the site.

You tell everyone your financial situation, you tell us your life plans, you even tell us your favorite color. And for what? For a small hope, for a bit of excitement, to win something “on the Internet” without much effort? For your trust in some unknown people behind the scenes who don't actually want to give you anything?

No, clicking here will not cost you any money. But if you ask yourself in the future why some people no longer take you so seriously, then you may have paid dearly.

Notes:
1) This content reflects the current state of affairs at the time of publication. The reproduction of individual images, screenshots, embeds or video sequences serves to discuss the topic. 2) Individual contributions were created through the use of machine assistance and were carefully checked by the Mimikama editorial team before publication. ( Reason )