Hard work and smarts do get you ahead. But not everybody plays fair.
People frequently bend or break the rules to their advantage and don't get caught. A recent Reddit thread asked for the best unethical life hacks people use to save money or get ahead. We've picked some of the most fascinating and devious examples.
These hacks are uniformly unethical. Some veer into fraud. They should be regarded as informational and for entertainment purposes rather than as actual suggestions. You shouldn't do them.
"Whenever I go to a big chain movie theater, I get my tickets from those electronic kiosks they have at the front, and I buy the child's price tickets. They're way cheaper.
"I'm always prepared to say, "Oops, did I buy a kid's ticket by accident? Sorry!" if I ever get caught, but I've done this at least a dozen times and have never been called on it."
Google Earth
"Never tell vendors for your wedding that you're hiring them for a wedding. It's an event or reunion. Big price difference."
"Make an appointment for the DMV for two weeks from today online (or whenever its available).
Save the confirmation page as PDF or HTML or JPG. Modify the date to todays date and the time to right now with Photoshop or edit the HTML with a text editor or whatever you're most comfortable with.
Save the confirmation page as PDF or HTML or JPG. Modify the date to todays date and the time to right now with Photoshop or edit the HTML with a text editor or whatever you're most comfortable with.
"Walk into the DMV past all the sorry people waiting hours directly to the 'appointment line'. Get served in under 5 minutes.
"Done this multiple time, it works. Sometimes they say 'oh, you're not in the computer, weird. Doesn't matter - our system always screws up. Go ahead.'"
"When you are calling a utility/customer service number, and you need to speak to someone but receive an automated menu prompt, choose the Spanish option, then press "0".
"Multiple benefits here. More often than not, they do not hire reps that only speak Spanish - they will most likely be bilingual, and will handle overflow calls in English anyway. Second, Spanish speakers are less common in India, so the Spanish speaking call-centers are usually located in the US - so when you get the rep, you will not have to deal with language barriers often encountered with the Indian reps. In addition, the wait is usually not as long."
Joe Raedle/Getty Images
"If you're hungry and it's between 6am-8am you can get free continental breakfast from pretty much any hotel you walk into. It helps if it's busy."
"If someone is battling you for the arm rest on an airplane cough into that arm then put it back. I fly a lot and have yet to see this fail."
"A plastic coffee stir stick can fool any push in coin acceptor that loads the coins on edge. Just insert stir stick, push the mechanism forward until you feel the stick hit a bump, push the bump down with the stick and push the mech all the way in.
"I did my laundry for free all throughout school, and great for free pool at the bar."
Mario Toma/Getty Images
"I always pick rock in rock paper scissors against my sister or in front of my sister. I end up doing dishes more, ect. but the odd time I really need something I pick scissors.
"She's always going on about how I'm sooo dumb for always picking rock but I know what's up."
"If you look like you know what you're doing, no one will bother you. To prove this in college, a friend and I walked into the student union holding a clipboard, walked straight over to a table, picked it up and walked out with it without anyone saying anything."
"When I was in college, I used to take all of my textbooks to the 2¢ self-copy place and photocopy them. All of them. Then I'd return them before the deadline for a full refund.
"It takes time, but a 500-page book will only end up costing you $10. When the new version is often $100 or more.
"Nowadays, you can usually find a PDF online. But if not, hey, there's this."
"When lying, always include something slightly embarrassing, or something that makes you look bad, as part of your story. It's not only going to disarm their skepticism (admitting to something embarrassing gives an impression of humility), but even if they remain skeptical, they'll be left wondering why you would make something up that you'd rather keep secret if it were true."
"Car in longterm parking? Walk up to the ticket machine and grab a new ticket to present on your way out."
"I have a bunch, here are a couple of my favs:
"Buy the cheapest ticket you can find for a sporting event you want to attend. 1 hour before it starts, log into Stubhub to see which nice (but not heavily secured) seats are still available at a price point higher than the competition. Write a few of them down and chances are you can sit there all game without any issue.
"Keep your next parking ticket (pay online) and put it on your windshield whenever you need to park illegally."
Christian Petersen/Getty Images
"Call up your TV provider, and tell them you want to stop using them. To keep your business they will offer extra channels. When the channels run out, repeat the process. I have had NFL Sunday Ticket on Directv for 3 years straight now for free."
"Using Clorox or any bleach will turn the red/pink liquid detection dot on electronic devices back to white so they replace them under warranty."
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Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/unethical-lifehacks-2013-9#ixzz3GSGZJMsV
2 - Swindle your company's customers lowering the quality of the company's products.
3 - Lie to your employees about lack of funds as you plunder the company's treasury.
4 - Go to #1
This is being done in 90% of American Corporations. The larger the company the bigger the heist.
Name a professor who makes more than any fortune 500 CEO.
--Web sites that have very misleading headlines as a matter of policy so as to get more clicks and serve up more ads.
--Web sites that have endless slideshows so as to get more clicks and serve up more ads.
--Former "#1 Internet Analyst" from Merrill Lynch, who shall remain nameless (Henry Blodget), who promoted crappy stocks to the public while privately deriding them and making millions (billions) off of it, then pleading guilty to securities fraud charges.
--Former "#1 Internet Analyst" from Merrill Lynch, who shall remain nameless (Henry Blodget), who gave very bullish targets ($400) on Amazon in 1998 when it was a POS and years later his pal invests $5 million in his web site (see above).
I can think of a few more things too.
We had a couple of guys in our dorm who lived the entire year largely on free food. They'd go to McDonald's claiming to have ordered 5 burgers the day before but only received 3, etc... They hit every place in town a couple of times until they wore it out.
Then there was a pizza place that gave away free 20'' pizzas for every 50 competitor coupons we could bring them. I and a couple of other guys went around to the pizza joints telling them we were dorm reps and that we were setting up a coupon table in the lobby if they wished to donate any to the cause. We got 3-4 free pizzas with that trick and a lot of laughs.
Now you can just used a digital camera to copy books. The resolution for most cameras ($100 cameras), is enough to capture a book. There are dozens of setups you can create to copy books very quickly. It's SNAP, flip page, SNAP. I've done a 200 pages per 10 min. Realize you get 2 pages per flip.
Probably where all the PDFs come from. Does someone have a link? :)
Many get sent back to the store or the store ends up paying out of pocket....It doesn't full anyone, but sometimes retails store managers will honor what their sales people told the customers even though they know it's was whited out or bleached.
2 - Swindle your company's customers lowering the quality of the company's products.
3 - Lie to your employees about lack of funds as you plunder the company's treasury.
4 - Go to #1
This is being done in 90% of American Corporations. The larger the company the bigger the heist.
CEOs got chump change compared to public sector employees. CEOs have come and gone. Taxpayers are on the hook for life.