|
Go on, I'll take one then. TBH using cheddar just makes it cheesy chips and gravy but I would value the sauce, thanks.
|
# ? Oct 29, 2014 14:33 |
|
|
# ? May 28, 2024 14:28 |
|
Why not make cheese curds by yourself? I'm sure you can find buttermilk in China.
|
# ? Oct 29, 2014 16:04 |
|
Haha, remember my telling you that I was replaced by a total shitbag at my university? Well, the students mutinied and went en masse to the dean to complain. He was removed from the classroom.
|
# ? Oct 30, 2014 16:48 |
|
Spiderjelly posted:Haha, remember my telling you that I was replaced by a total shitbag at my university? Well, the students mutinied and went en masse to the dean to complain. He was removed from the classroom. Ahahaha, this happened to the teacher I replaced. Be ready for massive QQ messages from your former boss, begging for you to return. If you're interested, this is a good time to get your salary doubled.
|
# ? Oct 30, 2014 22:14 |
|
I have obtained things for many people. I am prepared for the voyage. Couldn't find any Thrills gum though (the soap flavored one). Too bad. PM Me your numbers, HK goooooooooons.
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 00:32 |
|
FearCotton posted:Ahahaha, this happened to the teacher I replaced. Not for all the tea in China
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 04:09 |
|
Welp, I got hit with a variation of the tea house scam (wine instead of tea) the day before I left China. They claimed to be brother and sister in their 30s, yada, yada. I only realized it was a scam once they presented me the bill which was over $800 once converted to dollars. The siblings were the ones ordering the drinks, yet I was the one expected to pay. I used a credit card and pretended nothing was wrong just to avoid whatever it is they do to people that don't pay. But I immediately declared it as fraud once I was safely in back the states. I don't know how the investigation will go. Do never go with strangers that meet you at the forbidden city and pretend to be friendly. I guess I let my guard down because the previous day I met a legitimately nice Chinese family (mom, dad, daughter, grandma) at the Great Wall who treated me to dinner and never asked me for anything in return. Ugh, on the one hand, if I never trusted anybody, I would have missed on meeting the nice family. But by trusting the wrong people I'm possibly out $800+ depending on the credit card company. nelson fucked around with this message at 04:41 on Oct 31, 2014 |
# ? Oct 31, 2014 04:33 |
|
Did you make a fake signature. Should have signed an x. Then report the card fraud or stolen. Stolen probably better
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 04:41 |
|
caberham posted:Did you make a fake signature. Should have signed an x. Unfortunately I wasn't clever enough at the time and used my real signature.
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 04:44 |
|
nelson posted:Unfortunately I wasn't clever enough at the time and used my real signature. YOU DESERVED TO GET SCAMMED. Ouch eek hope things work out.
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 04:48 |
|
caberham posted:YOU DESERVED TO GET SCAMMED. Thanks, me too. I'm guessing it could have ended up a lot worse. Btw, what DO they do to people who refuse to pay?
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 04:51 |
|
I had a friend get scammed in a similar manner -in Shanghai some girls invited him to a bar. When the bill came he jumped up and ran away.
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 05:03 |
|
nelson posted:Welp, I got hit with a variation of the tea house scam (wine instead of tea) the day before I left China. They claimed to be brother and sister in their 30s, yada, yada. I only realized it was a scam once they presented me the bill which was over $800 once converted to dollars. The siblings were the ones ordering the drinks, yet I was the one expected to pay. I used a credit card and pretended nothing was wrong just to avoid whatever it is they do to people that don't pay. But I immediately declared it as fraud once I was safely in back the states. I don't know how the investigation will go. I did this once except I used it as an opportunity to practice Chinese on my first trip to China as the person walked with me around the Forbidden City area. Then I bailed as soon as she wanted to stop for some tea because I knew what was going on.
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 05:07 |
|
Tom Smykowski posted:I had a friend get scammed in a similar manner -in Shanghai some girls invited him to a bar. When the bill came he jumped up and ran away. Good for him. Shouldn't the merchant accounts for these companies be revoked for this kind of fraud? Why would the credit card companies want to associate with them?
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 05:08 |
|
nelson posted:Good for him. Shouldn't the merchant accounts for these companies be revoked for this kind of fraud? Why would the credit card companies want to associate with them? Why would they want to associate with you, a person who spent $800+ on wine and then tried to pass it off as fraud?
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 05:09 |
|
nelson posted:Welp, I got hit with a variation of the tea house scam (wine instead of tea) the day before I left China. They claimed to be brother and sister in their 30s, yada, yada. I only realized it was a scam once they presented me the bill which was over $800 once converted to dollars. The siblings were the ones ordering the drinks, yet I was the one expected to pay. I used a credit card and pretended nothing was wrong just to avoid whatever it is they do to people that don't pay. But I immediately declared it as fraud once I was safely in back the states. I don't know how the investigation will go. I've had people try that on me, but I'd heard of it, so NOPE. Sometimes I feel like getting in a fight, and I think that might be a good way to do it and not feel bad about kicking someone's rear end.
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 05:13 |
|
nelson posted:Welp, I got hit with a variation of the tea house scam (wine instead of tea) the day before I left China. They claimed to be brother and sister in their 30s, yada, yada. I only realized it was a scam once they presented me the bill which was over $800 once converted to dollars. The siblings were the ones ordering the drinks, yet I was the one expected to pay. I used a credit card and pretended nothing was wrong just to avoid whatever it is they do to people that don't pay. But I immediately declared it as fraud once I was safely in back the states. I don't know how the investigation will go. I feel like if I ever went to a Goon meet in Hong Kong this is what would happen to me, except we'd be at Ruby Tuesday's :I jk lol In all seriousness forums user nelson, sorry to hear about your bad luck and hope you can get this fixed. Society and people are absolutely poo poo in case anyone forgot.
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 06:53 |
|
Sometimes I think about what a weirdly charmed life I've had in China when I read this thread. In 5 years I've never come across 90% of the poo poo people post in this thread.
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 06:55 |
|
Magna Kaser posted:Sometimes I think about what a weirdly charmed life I've had in China when I read this thread. In 5 years I've never come across 90% of the poo poo people post in this thread. Yes you have they're just complainers.
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 06:59 |
|
When I was in Beijing I ran into an obvious wine scam and an obvious art house scam and I played along a few minutes and then made up some bullshit excuse and left. My old roommate actually used to go out of his way in Beijing and hang around the people and shout at everyone that the people were crooks and they always ended up quarreling lol
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 07:01 |
|
goldboilermark posted:quarreling WHO ARE YOU
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 07:21 |
|
fart simpson posted:Yes you have they're just complainers. I have never see anyone be killed (GF says he has seen 5+) I have never been deported or had visa issues I have never been scammed
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 07:48 |
|
I had four scam attempts my first day in Beijing on my first visit. I actually went along with the art show scam because the dude was really interesting and telling me about his life of living in Beijing since like 1940 and I needed souvenirs anyway. After I haggled the paintings were like $8 apiece so whatever, it was cheaper than legitimate art stores in Korea so not much of a scam.
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 08:09 |
|
I've seen three dead bodies that I can think of in the past five years in China, I don't think I've seen anyone actually be killed but I've seen some bad accidents that probably ended poorly for people involved. I've never been deported or had visa issues but know people that have. I have gone along with scams but then backed out before I finished getting scammed. You should come to Beijing for a year you will have all these experiences in like a weekend. Hell my uncle was in Beijing for only 4 days for work last year and he saw a dude he thought was dead on the ground and got scammed near Tiananmen.
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 08:17 |
|
I was a victim of the tea house scam on my first hour in Beijing, but it was like 50 euro so meh.
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 08:19 |
|
So far in Chengdu the only person who's tried to scam me was the fruit seller dude who wanted five yuan for one apple.
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 08:21 |
|
Arglebargle III posted:WHO ARE YOU Has he started throwing u's in color yet? That's when you know it's hopeless.
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 09:05 |
|
Grand Fromage posted:I had four scam attempts my first day in Beijing on my first visit. I actually went along with the art show scam because the dude was really interesting and telling me about his life of living in Beijing since like 1940 and I needed souvenirs anyway. After I haggled the paintings were like $8 apiece so whatever, it was cheaper than legitimate art stores in Korea so not much of a scam. Yeah I bought one of these art scam things as a cheap souvenir too.
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 09:38 |
|
Some dickhole at the Beijing airport tried to "help" me get on the Subway and then demanded that I pay for his services, I just bought my ticket real fast and bailed and got on the train before he could. Just loving leave. What are these people going to do? Neighbors, nearby shop owners, and the local beat-cops probably know their rep for scamming. Nothing'll happen unless they're greasing the beat-cops.
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 10:13 |
|
goldboilermark posted:Hell my uncle was in Beijing for only 4 days for work last year and he saw a dude he thought was dead on the ground and got scammed near Tiananmen. How does that scam work?
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 10:15 |
|
Woodsy Owl posted:Nothing'll happen unless they're greasing the beat-cops. Not sure how common this actually is (I've heard people -- Westerners and Chinese alike -- say this kind of corruption is rampant, but I really dunno), but I suspect the cops would at the least be like, "Look, the easiest thing to do is just pay it, so why don't you do that?"
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 10:31 |
|
blinkyzero posted:Not sure how common this actually is (I've heard people -- Westerners and Chinese alike -- say this kind of corruption is rampant, but I really dunno), but I suspect the cops would at the least be like, "Look, the easiest thing to do is just pay it, so why don't you do that?" I think stuff like this is overstated because people make assumptions when things don't go their way. Kind of like how China Law Blog guy basically says a lot of the stories of Americans being treated unfairly when doing business in China is because American businessmen tend to assume things in China work the same way they work back home, and when that assumption fails, they complain that things are unfair. My favorite was the story of the company that went through a difficult legal process with the EPA to legally import a dangerous chemical into the US, and then got in trouble when they just started importing the same chemical into China because hey, the EPA lets us import it!
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 10:46 |
|
Woodsy Owl posted:Just loving leave. What are these people going to do? Neighbors, nearby shop owners, and the local beat-cops probably know their rep for scamming. Nothing'll happen unless they're greasing the beat-cops. It was fear that prevented me from doing that. I really didn't know that nothing would happen. I figured it would be hard to explain to the cops when I don't know Chinese. I envisioned myself being put in Chinese jail for failure to pay (or alternatively getting mugged and having to postpone my flight while I got a new passport and file a police report).
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 11:01 |
|
fart simpson posted:I think stuff like this is overstated because people make assumptions when things don't go their way. Kind of like how China Law Blog guy basically says a lot of the stories of Americans being treated unfairly when doing business in China is because American businessmen tend to assume things in China work the same way they work back home, and when that assumption fails, they complain that things are unfair. My favorite was the story of the company that went through a difficult legal process with the EPA to legally import a dangerous chemical into the US, and then got in trouble when they just started importing the same chemical into China because hey, the EPA lets us import it! That would be a pretty huge oversight on the part of the company's legal department (or their hired counsel, be it American or a Chinese domestic firm). I'll look that up and read it through. edit: just on the main page right now there's this, which is interesting: quote:2. If you hire someone to create a work for you, that person owns the copyright in the completed work unless you have a contract that states otherwise. I cannot tell you how many times we have been contacted by American software companies that have lost the copyrights in their software to someone (usually a group of someones) they paid to create the software in China. If you pay your joint venture entity to create software for you and you do not have a contract (preferably in Chinese) with the joint venture entity making clear that you and not the joint venture entity own the copyrights in that software, the joint venture entity will own the copyrights, not you. It also always makes sense to be clear — in writing — with your employees as to who owns the copyrightable works the employees create as between you and them. That's different from US copyright law in some subtle but very important details. blinkyzero fucked around with this message at 11:06 on Oct 31, 2014 |
# ? Oct 31, 2014 11:03 |
|
It smacks of paying a carpenter to make a chair then at the end of the day they take it home with them because hey, they made it.
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 11:15 |
|
simplefish posted:It smacks of paying a carpenter to make a chair then at the end of the day they take it home with them because hey, they made it. Well, strictly speaking you'd get the chair, but the carpenter would get the right to make more chairs. And even then only if you were too stupid to tell the carpenter in the first place that you've got dibs on future chair-building.
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 11:18 |
|
There's a bigger analogy behind it that takes care of that but I can't be arsed
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 11:26 |
|
nelson posted:It was fear that prevented me from doing that. I really didn't know that nothing would happen. I figured it would be hard to explain to the cops when I don't know Chinese. I envisioned myself being put in Chinese jail for failure to pay (or alternatively getting mugged and having to postpone my flight while I got a new passport and file a police report). Worst part is that we never know and it's all in your head. You yourself is always your biggest enemy
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 11:50 |
|
Trying to add money to my Alipay account and I've run into this mystery password. I set up a second password for high-security stuff when I created the account, but that field will only accept 6 characters, numbers only. Almost like... a bank pin. Alipay is seriously not asking me for my name, passport number, card number and PIN is it? Because seriously, gently caress that.
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 13:22 |
|
|
# ? May 28, 2024 14:28 |
|
caberham posted:Worst part is that we never know and it's all in your head. You yourself is always your biggest enemy Tell that to Hitler.
|
# ? Oct 31, 2014 14:30 |