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noblejr 08-26-2003 07:36 PM

How-To: Freeloading
 
Inspired by UnlikedOne's post "Get FREE car washes; Here's how."
there's probably a lot of free stuff out there to be had, but only a select few know about it. If you know how to freeload, please enlighten the rest of us.


I'll start with how to get most large theme parks for free. For this to work you must be with someone who has a ticket. Some parks will give you a "shoppers pass" for free. You pay for a ticket at the customer service window, go into the park to make your purchase that is not sold outside the park, and return to the customer service window within an hour, and they give you your money back. Well, have the person with a ticket go up and get a shoppers pass. When he gets in line to get into the park, have him pass the shoppers ticket to you. He goes in with his real ticket and you get in with the shopper pass. He goes and buys something, and takes your ticket stub back out of the park and gets the refund. Then he re-enters the park on his real ticket. You're both in the park!


This is one hell of a freeloading tip, so please return the favor.

Stare At The Sun 08-31-2003 09:03 PM

Yeah, i'd like to see more stuff like this, so, here we go:

On certain style "beaver"(brand name) vending machines of gumball/candy, you can get free candy, as much as you like, here's how.

Press in on the knob with your thumb. Turn it as far as you can with your other fingers, to the right, now simply rotate it backwards, on about 10% of the machines, it will freely rotate, giving you free candy. :) usually, its the more boxy style machines.

Also, most vending machines that you "push/turn" your quarters in, (not drop them into the machine) you can simply take a plastic fork, jam it into the slots, and break off the tips, turn the handle, and yay!

http://www.tfproject.org/tfp/showthr...threadid=22661

This is slightly illegal, thats ok though.

5 dollar bill=mass cash, heres how.

Take 1 five dollar bill to a lamenating machine, lamenate it, and then leave about 4 foot of lament behind it, then shave the lament to the very edge of it, it must be very precise. you then just take it to a secluded change machine(car wash stations open 24/7 w/ no security cameras, a few counties away work well. Basically, just insert the bill, let the change come out, and then pull it back out. Repeat untill the machine is empty :).

Ahhh, fuck da system.

*note, just ask, i will clarify anything that is unclear

I'm a Slacker 09-01-2003 10:28 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by UnlikedOne
and then leave about 4 foot of lament behind it, then shave the lament to the very edge of it, it must be very precise.
*note, just ask, i will clarify anything that is unclear

4 feet?? or 4 in thanks.

Stare At The Sun 09-01-2003 03:18 PM

like basically you have a five dollar bill with four feet of lamanet behind it. just feed it into the machine, and pull it back out

noblejr 09-01-2003 08:15 PM

Here's another. Some computer companies will replace components without having you return it. As long as you have a valid serial number, they will ship you a new keyboard, joystick, whatever without having the broken one shipped back to them. So then you could go to your local computer store and copy down the serial number off a display model. Just call them up, report it broken, and wait for a new one in the mail!


And to point my thread in the right direction:

free·load v. - To take advantage of the charity, generosity, or hospitality of others

steal v. - To take (the property of another) without right or permission.

Blistex 09-02-2003 09:05 AM

Ive never heard of companies giving away replacement equipment without first recieving the original.

Although RMA`ing is an excellent way to get new hard disks.

Almost every hard drive has a 3 year warrenty, before the warrenty is up call the company and give them the serial number. When they send you an RMA number fry the Hard disk and mail it to them.

3/5 times you will recieve a hard disk larger than the one you mailed to them since HD`s double in size almost every year.

Stare At The Sun 09-02-2003 12:39 PM

^ Nice, also, the whole, go to the store and get the serial number thing, usually works with boen, you know, "buy it for looks, buy it for life" faucet things. nice stuff, just find one thats in the back, and get the upc from it, you'll be set. :)

skippy 09-02-2003 04:41 PM

I am now Corrupted and will never be the same.

Here comes my deluge of free carwashes and Moen Fawcetts... I think I'll type it all up with my free keyboard ... at the TILTED FORUM YOU HAVEN"T PAID A CENT TOO....

Just kidding ! Have a great day !

Donate... don't freeload!! The TFP is worth it all!!!

Skippy

Stare At The Sun 09-02-2003 05:26 PM

Oh yeah, though unverified, this would work(in theory)

1.) Find an abandoned house, or vacant apartment.

2) Go buy a Playstation 2, xbox, etc. Then buy the replacement plan for 18 dollars. From best buy. Now, when they ask you for your phone, give them a bogus one, and redo the address in Best buys computer to be that of the vacant address.

3) Call the 1-800 number on the back of the replacement plan. Tell them it broke, blah blah, they will send you a box to send in the ps2, however, at the same time, they will send you a store credit for 180 bucks, or whatever it is. So, you just keep the ps2, pick up the store credit voucher. Then go buy some girls gone wild vids.

This however, is unverified, but when i did this,(called for a replacement/voucher) i got the store credit, before i got the box, so...*shrug* what you do with this info is your choice....:D

meff 09-14-2003 10:50 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by Blistex
Ive never heard of companies giving away replacement equipment without first recieving the original.
Dell did this with my laptop I used to have, I sold the extra parts to the local shop :D

candymanman 09-21-2003 11:54 AM

good freeloading me and my friends do every so often. I live where there are many, Many companys. Companys always have company picnics. We discovered this by accident one night when we saw a big comotion going on at a picnic ground. We crashed a company picnic, had a good time had alot to eat, drink, etc. And we rolled a keg out unnoticed!!!(guess thats stealing, o well) So we just find out when company picnics are via the internet and repeat the same thing. who doesnt want a free keg and good time, exciting too.

westothemax 09-21-2003 09:00 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by meff
Dell did this with my laptop I used to have, I sold the extra parts to the local shop :D
I actually did this to HP by accident.

I thought they didn't give me a power supply for a laptop I had just bought. I immediatly called them up and HP support said they'd just send one out to me, no questions asked. Later that day I was taking the box out to the trash and I noticed there was a power supply at the bottom. Yeah I felt stupid but in a good way.

Mango 09-22-2003 12:56 PM

A little freeloading tip. Get a quarter, drill a hole in the center of it, loop a piece of fishing line through the hole, use it in vending machines for free food or arcade games. Once the quarter has passed the spot where it is counted you pull it back and let it pass again.

89transam 10-01-2003 10:57 PM

Some people can get two sodas almost every time by hitting the machines in the right spot. Thats what I wanna know how to do.

heres my small addition.Recently,I was dissatisfied with some taco bell so I called that 1800 number. ANyway I told them the problem and my name and address and how much the bill was (Around $5.00). I kid you not, the next day I had five bucks in taco bell gift certificates in the mail.

I hear this works with lots of other stuff too. All you have to do is call thier complaint/ suggestion line and they will send you free stuff.

As far as stealing goes, I have heard that as soon as you make it out of the door of certain stores (Best buy,Circuit city..etc) youre home free, they wont chase you , even if they saw you run out the door with a tv on your back. its just too much of a liability to chase you.

Pellaz 10-03-2003 09:14 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by 89transam
As far as stealing goes, I have heard that as soon as you make it out of the door of certain stores (Best buy,Circuit city..etc) youre home free, they wont chase you , even if they saw you run out the door with a tv on your back. its just too much of a liability to chase you.
Having been the assistant manager at a media store, I can tell you that we most assuredly had this policy, set down from a cooperate level. I can also most assuredly say that this was ingnored on several occasions for punk ass teens who thought they could get away with it.

89transam 10-03-2003 09:40 AM

not saying that I would do it, I not much for THAT sort of stealing

Thraeryn 10-03-2003 10:15 AM

Shoplifting is bad, boys and girls. You end up with lots of free books, CDs, and knick-knacks that you wouldn't have had otherwise.

Don't do it.

nash 10-04-2003 02:33 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by Mango
A little freeloading tip. Get a quarter, drill a hole in the center of it, loop a piece of fishing line through the hole, use it in vending machines for free food or arcade games. Once the quarter has passed the spot where it is counted you pull it back and let it pass again.
I was going to add something similar, but with tape and string. We do it to parking meters around here.

danielboy 10-15-2003 06:49 PM

This is pretty stupid, but get your magazines from the doctor's office or hospital. I work at the hospital and I have a "subscription" to Texas Monthly, Harpers, The Atlantic, Forbes, Smart Investing, JAMA, NEJOM, and the Dallas Morning News.

floonine 10-16-2003 01:00 PM

With the right kinda luck you can get free stuff from your phone company, credit card, or utility company, but it usually depends on who picks up the phone... Like 89transam said, if you bug people enough about something, most of the time they would do anything for you to keep you a customer and keep them their jobs.
Of course, that could back fire pretty easily with the aforementioned companies, because if the people on the phones were having a bad day before you called, they could do whatever they wanted to your info if they wanted... that might just be me being paranoid.

merkerguitars 10-16-2003 01:02 PM

Ok this is a good trick.....if you want a certain piece of electronics for free but can't afford it get something that is broken. Then buy the exact same item (or something that looks really similar) and shove it in the box and return it. I have done this many times trading a broken older model sony radio for a newer one and swapping a lazar cd player for a jensen one.

floonine 10-16-2003 01:10 PM

A great example of the above is taking anything back to Walmart. Walmart will not only take its own merchandise back, but will even take back merchandise that they sell OR DO NOT SELL, even if you didn't buy it from them (i.e. your cd player you bought from bestbuy broke, try taking it to Walmart and they might take it back).
I bought some software for a lan party at a walmart, and when I opened the jewel cases, there were no cds or cd keys (two disks). That means the person bought the software, took out the stuff he needed, and then returned. Hooray for Walmart.

Blistex 10-19-2003 09:16 PM

Ok, here is some stuff that usually works at Future Shop, it might work at other places that sell and Repair PC's.

You buy a PC from Future Shop or wherever and when buying it make sure that you act like a computer moron and mention "my brother said to get this".

Now you need a visual confirmation, so get one of the guys to give you his card so you can contact him if it breaks. Now take it home and 1 hour later call their tech support saying that it won't start and says, "missing operating system".

now remove the hard disk!

Take it into the store and say that it just won't work. Anywhere from one week to one month later voila! You will have a PC with a new hard disk in it. They will just assume a tech forgot to put it in or something.

(this can also be done with RAM, Modems, Sound Cards, and even CPU's if you're feeling brave!).

p.s. this is theft/fraud.

jerseyboy 10-19-2003 09:30 PM

Now this is a thread I enjoy. Do the tricks with drilling a hole in a quarter still work. I thought vending machine companies got smart to that and made it so machines will not accept coins with holes in them?

messy 10-20-2003 10:02 AM

As <b>merkerguitars</b> said, that technique really does work.

I bought a crappy Samsung DVD player a long time ago, when DVD players were first introduced. Later, when "The Matrix" came out on DVD, I tried playing it in my Samsung player. Didn't work. I called Samsung and they said that some newer DVD's won't play on that particular model (Something to do with the newer DVDs being dual layered... correct me if I'm wrong).

Anywho, I took out my frustration on Sam's Club. I went there and purchased a $400 top of the line 5-disc carousel Toshiba DVD player. Got it home, hooked it up and slapped that old Samsung in the box and returned that badboy to Sam's Club and got my $400 back... cash. They didn't even bother opening the box. They never do.

If they do happen to open the box and realize you're trying to pull a fast one, just tell them that you're dumb ass girlfriend was supposed to package it back up while you were at work, so you could return it when you got home. <i>"She must have accidentally wrapped up the wrong player. Sorry, but we have one in every room, and she must have got a little confused about which one had to go back."</i> That was my plan going in.

Sion 10-21-2003 03:19 AM

here is a good one I used to pull in college. ok, first off, understand that I had a credit card from my folks for books and emergencies. so, each at the start of each quarter, I'd get my list of books required. On the first or second day of classes, I took that to the bookstore across the street from campus (not the official University store, but one of the many that serviced the school). Using the credit card, I bought my books, being sure to get a receipt. Now, at this particular store, you got a register receipt showing the purchases you made, and a credit card receipt that was seperate. So, what I would do was to return to the store the very next day with only the register receipt. This is a BIG state university, so of course they were ALWAYS very crowded during the first week of classes. That is a plus. Also, in this particular store, the returns desk was toward the back, while the registers were at the front. Also a plus. So anyway, I'd go in with my receipt and pick up the exact same books I bought the day before. Then I'd go up front and get in one of those LONG-ASSED lines for the registers. After a 5 or 10 mins, I'd suddenly "remember" I needed something else, and get out of line, head back to the returns desk and "return" all the books for cash, saying that I dropped the classes.

so, it worked out that not only did I get the books I needed that mom so generously offered to pay for (had loans and scholaships for tuition, so she was getting off lucky in that respect) but I ALSO got the cash value of those books. usually about $150 -$200 per quarter.

of course, this wont work everywhere, but given the right set of circumstances, its a nice scam.

costello 10-25-2003 03:47 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by 89transam
As far as stealing goes, I have heard that as soon as you make it out of the door of certain stores (Best buy,Circuit city..etc) youre home free, they wont chase you , even if they saw you run out the door with a tv on your back. its just too much of a liability to chase you.

Please TFP do not try this at the frys electronics stores. My stepfather is the manager of loss prevention and comes home nearly everyday (proudly, which is sad) with stories of chases he's made in the parking lot. Yesterday he broke a guys arm slamming him into a wall.

Jam 10-26-2003 11:53 PM

heh... this is a good thread

some older popmachines... probably 90s... they were shorter and had larger buttons.. they would spit out two pops if you hit 2 buttons at the exact same time... tho i was only shown this i never did it... damn my morals...


and what seems popuplar i dont know how but they can make it so pop gets stuck in the bottom of the machine.. then when people buy pop they figure the machine ate the money and give up... then they would come back and get abunch of free pop off of thier scam... however the dumb people in my school... they always set it up then i would buy a pop... and i already knew what happens... so i just got like 10 free pops off of someone elses hard work... doesnt violate moral either :P

they also did this with the change machine...

jw_toyboy 10-27-2003 09:03 AM

I know there are some older pop/soda/coke etc. machines that when you hit the drink and refund button at the same time you get your drink and your money back.
It takes some work to time it just right but when you get the hang of it, you'l never pay for a drink again... until they bring new machines in where the trick dosent work :(

turbodriven 10-28-2003 09:09 PM

These examples are from things I have noticed in the past.

UPS will issue an insurance claim settlement without actually verifying that the item was broken. However... I'm not sure what the insurance limit is for this. And furthermore... they do reserve the right to come inspect the item if they choose. My particular item was under $100 and they never came to inspect it. I imagine for higher insured items they would make it a point to come see it for themselves. Also I'm not sure if they track how many times a certain individual makes claims.

So.. the scam would involve sending something from work to your home address (a rock for all anyone cares). Filing a claim that your "whatever" was damaged upon reciept. Make sure you actually have a "whatever" that you could damage or already is damaged in case they actually come out to see it or take it. And voila... an instant $100.

Second scam is a story I heard from a friend.

Back to the Walmart thing. He actually got home with a set of stereo speakers that had nothing but a cinder block in the box. Either a store employee stole the speakers or walmart returned the speakers from a previous scammer and never verified the speakers box's contents before putting them back on the shelf. He returned them and got a different box with actual speakers in them.

So... again the scam would go like this. Buy a "whatever" from Walmart. Go home and swap contents with a couple of rocks. And return the box with rocks in it to Walmart and get a second set of "whatever" to do whatever with. Either use the "whatevers" or sell them on ebay.

Both of these seem very legit... no matter how morally wrong they are. No way on either end can it be proven that your up to malicious behavior.

Stare At The Sun 10-28-2003 10:18 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by turbodriven
These examples are from things I have noticed in the past.

UPS will issue an insurance claim settlement without actually verifying that the item was broken. However... I'm not sure what the insurance limit is for this. And furthermore... they do reserve the right to come inspect the item if they choose. My particular item was under $100 and they never came to inspect it. I imagine for higher insured items they would make it a point to come see it for themselves. Also I'm not sure if they track how many times a certain individual makes claims.

So.. the scam would involve sending something from work to your home address (a rock for all anyone cares). Filing a claim that your "whatever" was damaged upon reciept. Make sure you actually have a "whatever" that you could damage or already is damaged in case they actually come out to see it or take it. And voila... an instant $100.

Second scam is a story I heard from a friend.

Back to the Walmart thing. He actually got home with a set of stereo speakers that had nothing but a cinder block in the box. Either a store employee stole the speakers or walmart returned the speakers from a previous scammer and never verified the speakers box's contents before putting them back on the shelf. He returned them and got a different box with actual speakers in them.

So... again the scam would go like this. Buy a "whatever" from Walmart. Go home and swap contents with a couple of rocks. And return the box with rocks in it to Walmart and get a second set of "whatever" to do whatever with. Either use the "whatevers" or sell them on ebay.

Both of these seem very legit... no matter how morally wrong they are. No way on either end can it be proven that your up to malicious behavior.

Very good additions!!!

Danke shun :)

GuttersnipeXL 10-29-2003 08:19 AM

Writing letters of complaint to companies works great. You have to wait around for the pay off but it's worth it. Most companies will go out of their way to satisfy a customer, especially when you are dealing directly to the manufacturer of the product instead of a sales rep at the store you got the product. Here is an example...I sent a letter to Hersheys Chocolate Mfg Co, stating that a Mr. Goodbar I had recently purchased was tainted...it tastedlike styrofoam. I said that I had been a frequent buyer of their products, but wouldn't be anymore if this continued. I sent the letter out, a few weeks passed and then I got a letter back from them saying how sorry they were, and how valued a customer I was...along with 20 1dollar couponsfor anything Hershey makes. Anyway...it's not much,but it is still 20 bucks. You can use the sameprocedure on any company and they will hook you up with something. BTW...my eigth grade English teacher had us do this as a class assignment!

Mikado 10-29-2003 10:36 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by 89transam
As far as stealing goes, I have heard that as soon as you make it out of the door of certain stores (Best buy,Circuit city..etc) youre home free, they wont chase you , even if they saw you run out the door with a tv on your back. its just too much of a liability to chase you.
Being an ex investigator for Foley's Corporate here in Texas, I can strongly advise against this. Large corporate stores like department stores, Best Buy, Circuit City, etc have loss prevention departments within each store. Investigators like myself watch hundreds of cameras looking for anyone who's stupid enough to try and get that quick five-finger discount.

We even have investigators walking the floor who act like a typical customer. That's where I started, just browsing sections of the store looking for people trying to pull a fast one. Every one of those investigators has full authority to arrest and prosecute anyone in the store, and even anyone leaving the store.

I've been on hundreds of chases, one even involved the mounted patrol that worked the lot at the mall. We carry restraints, sometimes cuffs, just like any other police official. We work closely with county and city officials when it comes to prosecuting and arrests. It's really an interesting job, but we're not some rent-a-cop.

So don't push your luck if you try to get out of a store with stolen property. Chances are you'll be confronted and/or chased. However, there are some smaller retail chains like Hollywood Video, corner stores, etc that do inform their employees that they are never to pursue a suspect outside the building. Legal issues are involved when a store employee waives a person's civil rights by giving chase or attempting to apprehend a suspect. It's best advised to let them go and call the authorities.

BubblegumTeflon 10-29-2003 09:49 PM

You can always get sneakycheap!

Also, a friend told me about some shady guy he knew who did the boxswap trick with cameras. But he did it carefully. He would buy for example an olympus 150, then buy an olympus 200 and do the boxswap. Then the 200 for a 250, 250 for a 300, and so on until he had like a 600. So he spent like $200 and ended up with a $700 camera.

Oh and he went to different Wal-marts for all of them, paid cash only and never went back to them again after the swaps.

BuddyHawks 10-29-2003 10:25 PM

I've never tried this and must be done at a store that dosn't scan for this(like Walmart and unlike Best Buy)
Purchase an item
walk back into the store with the reciept
grab the same item off the shelve
return the second item with the reciept from the first
= free item

turbodriven 10-29-2003 10:41 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by BuddyHawks
I've never tried this and must be done at a store that dosn't scan for this(like Walmart and unlike Best Buy)
Purchase an item
walk back into the store with the reciept
grab the same item off the shelve
return the second item with the reciept from the first
= free item

Yeah Walmart puts a little sticker on all merchandise that enters the store from the outside. To prevent this scam from happening I assume.

quadro2000 10-30-2003 07:38 AM

Man......there's opportunity for some BAD karma on this thread! :)

I used to call all the consumer hotlines on the sides of soda cans, Doritos and such. I called Coca-Cola and told them that I received a 6-pack of Coke that had all the pop-tops nearly broken, so when I tried to open each one, the pop-top came off in my hand and I couldn't open the soda. They sent me two coupons, each for a free 24-pack. 48 free cans of soda. Sometimes you don't even have to complain, just call them up and tell them how much you like their product, and they'll send you some goodies.

Eldaire 11-17-2003 12:51 AM

*bump*

I just had to send this back to the front. This thread has changed my life.

canuckguy 11-17-2003 09:26 AM

Beer in canada works like that, just call the number on the bottle and complain about the beer being skunky. I did it for molson and it worked great. I recommend not calling at 10pm on a saturday night as they might think your just in it for free beer. Did this twice, once i called on a sunday morning and said that two bottles were bad, they said, would u like us to mail u a coupon for a free case or go to your local store and pick one up? i said store, they phone ahead to the store and u go pick up your free case. not bad and you don't have to return the rest of the beer. second time i did it, i got more creative. I called on a monday morning from my office. I said that i had a business clients over on the weekend for a meet and greet and 4 bottles were bad, i told molsons i was embarrassed because i had used by mistake one of the beers to season some rock lobster.....hehehe. They sent me coupons for 4 free cases and a goody pack of hats, shirts, golf balls..etc. Thank you molsons. btw since that like all good karma i've had three bad beers....oh well.

Neato 11-17-2003 11:37 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by 89transam
As far as stealing goes, I have heard that as soon as you make it out of the door of certain stores (Best buy,Circuit city..etc) youre home free, they wont chase you , even if they saw you run out the door with a tv on your back. its just too much of a liability to chase you.
I also need to suggest you do not try this. I worked at Shop-Ko and we had this really cool anti-theft dude. I heard tons of stories from him and the other workers where the anti-theft guy would chase theives as far as he could without losing them. He would often enlist the help of multiple workers. He even chased a guy for blocks in a car chase of sorts.

orange monkeyee 11-17-2003 06:36 PM

Shit, my 200 dollar digital camera fried after using it for 6 months. Liking it and all I went to walmart, bought a new one, returned teh broken one. I think it was technically under warranty but I'm too lazy to do all that shit and send it in to Kodak,

jvwgtr 11-18-2003 11:02 AM

I had a coworker who was employed in Customer Service at Nordstrom's....they're a department store famous for their no-questions-asked return policy.
She said she once had a guy bring in four monster truck tires...they don't sell anything remotely similar to automotive parts...and they HAD to give the guy a cash "refund".

merkerguitars 11-19-2003 12:42 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by Neato
I also need to suggest you do not try this. I worked at Shop-Ko and we had this really cool anti-theft dude. I heard tons of stories from him and the other workers where the anti-theft guy would chase theives as far as he could without losing them. He would often enlist the help of multiple workers. He even chased a guy for blocks in a car chase of sorts.
Yeah I would recommend this too....I know at my local bestbuy they hired a guy that could run fast as hell and a big tough guy to hold the person down.......and they dont' take any shit.....

Oh yeah here are some other good tips.....

I do computer work for a bodyshop and the owner knows me and my parents really good. So everytime we get into an accident and it's the other persons fault he bumps up the estimate a little for us to profit. My dad has done it with his harley that he has done all the custom work to. Since for someone else to do the work...it would of cost lots of money. Too bad wal-mart didn't sell better computer parts...I could so switch out vid cards....and hard drives...:) Heres another one to get free newpapers...those metal vending machines will sometimes open up if you give them two quick yanks.

Conclamo Ludus 11-19-2003 12:03 PM

I remember a good Target scam that my old roommate would always pull. They had some of those nifty French pop art posters for sale in the frames at one Target store for $12 a piece. Normally they were like $26 or something like that. The sale was only at one store, so he would buy three or four of them at that one store, and be refunded full price at another store. He did this all the time whenever he needed some cash for the weekends.

There are some great scams on this thread.

Scape 11-19-2003 02:58 PM

I use to work at best buy and yeah they wont chase you if you make it out the 2nd set of doors, but they got so many cameras the chances of you makeing it out are very slim.

valkan 12-07-2003 11:02 PM

some amazing stuff in here guys, i myself have been to many movie theaters and found the raising of the prices constantly to be annoying, so i came up with some ways that one might be able to get around that.

At a local movie theater here, it is on that is inside a mall. You go up an escalator and theres a big open area, one wall with atms, the desk and the arcade/food place. there is noone ripping tickets right where you buy them so heres something you can pull off which required 2 people at minimum.

have 2 friends go on in, one person comes back outside with the other persons ripped ticket, hand off the ripped ticket and head back in with one person for free.

Another nifty thing is having one person go in the theater, ask people to buy their ripped ticket for maybe $1 each if they wont be using it, come back outside and hand off any bought tickets to friends then quickly refund the ticket saying you had to leave for an emergency.

Now these are all theoretical of course, i can't imagine anyone who would possibly do such a thing. Have fun

basmoq 12-11-2003 04:01 PM

yall are sick sick puppies, but thanks for the tips :)

glasscutter43 12-14-2003 01:32 AM

While doing renovations in a bank, I noticed 2 different people come in and say the ATM shorted them $20.00. The bank just gave them $20.00. When I asked, they said they only check the ATM records and video if it is more than $20.00.

When I was in high school we would take a peice of wire and insert one end into one of the holes on a public telephone receiver and touch the other end into the keyhole of the coin hopper. This would allow a call without inserting a dime. I haven't tried this in many years.

NoSoup 12-28-2003 01:49 AM

Well, also not really recommended, but a story to share-

A friend of mine and I were at a local Wal-Mart, we both had a bit of shopping to do. To save time, we split up and got what we needed. On they way out, He was carrying a rather large TV still in a box, 38 inches, I believe. Well, the alarms went off, and he "angrily" turned around, walked up to the greeter person, and said something along the lines that it was heavy as hell and the clerk obviously missed the security strip somwhere. The greeter, rather flustered, hastily got a cart for him and brought it out to his car, the proceeded to LOAD it into his car.

We climbed in, and after he burst into laughter, told me that he had actually just stolen the TV...

I guess occationally being incredibly bold when ripping off things that you can't smuggle out of the store can pay off...

John Henry 12-31-2003 06:22 PM

1)I went to an all you can eat chinese buffet banquet place the other day. I had to leave early so I settled up with my friends and walked out unaccosted. When I got to the train station I found that my train wasn't leaving for a few minutes and also that I had left something in the restaurant. I went back in, went to my table stopped to help myself to some dessert, got my stuff and walked out again. All this without so much as a glance from the staff. If you were unscrupulous enough, it would probably be easy to sneak in to these sort of places on a busy sitting, have your meal and walk out again.

2) In my experience, train conductors in Britain always start from the back and move forward. For some (usually short) journeys you can get on the train at the very front and the ticket collector will never get to you. Make sure it's somewhere that the ticket office is closed or where they don't operate penalty fines, or they might screw you.

phaedrus 01-03-2004 11:50 PM

Damn you, damn you all j/k After reading this thread I'm going to open everything I buy before I leave the store just to make sure it isn't a bunch of rocks.

Anyway, heres a good way to rip off nike:
I've a friend who would go to the clearance aisle or an outlet store and buy the last seasons nikes. He would then pop the air bubble in the shoes and contact nike. They would replace the broken shoe with new ones from the current season. He would take those shoes and return them to a shoe store. Pocketing the difference between the discount shoes and the full price new shoes. I don't know how often he did this, but after a while I think Nike would catch on.

DrJekyll 01-04-2004 10:24 PM

I got some moldy Jose Ole taquitos the other day. I called up the company the next day and they asked if I had the serial number (or whatever), but I didn't. They asked if they should send coupons for free Jose Ole products. Hopefully the coupons should be in next week. This did make me wonder if you could sustain yourself by calling comment lines with a complaint.

Another good legitimate freeload...if you happen to go to Universal Studios and stay at their official hotels, your room key allows you to go to the head of any line in the park. Well, that info's current as of a couple of years ago. Just be prepared to get mean looks from people as you walk up the exit line.

Another vending machine trick...there are those vending machines with the glass front that usually serve drinks like Snapple. Well, if it's in a low-traffic area, you can clear out the bottom rows with a coat-hanger. Just stretch and bend with a loop on the end. Then, open up the doors, wedge the hanger up inside, and loop it around a drink. The drink should pull out with too much trouble. We used to do this years ago at a camp. Eventually, they must've caught on, because they redesigned the machine to beep if you lifted the door for too long. However, since it was in a low-traffic area (the vending room in a dorm), it usually didn't attract much attention.

The final idea is slightly more malicious. I've heard of a friend pulling it off, but I've never really had the desire. Basically, he and a friend got a sweatshirt or something and kept tossing it around a music store (over the rows to each other). At some point, they slipped a CD inside. Once they got to the door, they continued the pattern by tossing the sweatshirt to the other over the theft detectors.

3rdEye 01-05-2004 06:34 PM

I did these things to k-mart.

Camera Film- Grab a box or single box of film, scope the store for cameras. They usually have the black dome looking cameras, that prob arn't even cameras. anyway they don't have them in every isle in the store, find a convienient isle w/out a camera, quickly open and discard the box into the shelfs. Put the film canister into your pocket and leave that trailor trash employing hole.

Me and my buddies were ggoing to the mountains on weekend in hgh school and we forgot a cd player to play tunes. We stopped at k-fart and found a few we liked. Problem was nobody wanted to throw in money. So me and a buddy got the bright idea to shove a nice phillips boom box off the shelf model into a shitty boom box, box. We unplugged the nice one, took the shitty one out of the box and replaced it with the nice one. We payed 30 instead of 80. I was nervous as hell at the counter, the box was all crammed full like it didn't fit insde the. Luckily those idiots didn't notice. What a great weekend.
I was such an asshole in high school, I prob wouldn't have the balls to do it now. Although I do want to try the quarter thing, drill the whole technique.

filtherton 01-12-2004 09:30 AM

This one is kind've like NoSoup's

A friend of mine decided that he need a bike. Being the type that preferred to spend his money on drugs rather than things he actually needed he decides to steal said bike. What does he do? He walks into a target superstore, grabs a bike from their display rack, walks it to the point where you choose between going to the checkouts or leaving and just hops on the bike and rides away. Simple as pie. I don't know if they chased him or not, but i do know that he did it at a few more target stores in the surrounding suburbs and got away with it.

Not that i'm advocating stealing, just relating a story about a friend of mine.

89transam 01-12-2004 11:38 PM

This thread turned from how to freeload into how to steal

noblejr 01-13-2004 01:47 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by noblejr

And to point my thread in the right direction:

free·load v. - To take advantage of the charity, generosity, or hospitality of others

steal v. - To take (the property of another) without right or permission.


xim 01-17-2004 01:25 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by 89transam
This thread turned from how to freeload into how to steal
Aint it great?

smooth_4 01-24-2004 09:37 AM

Two great sites for freeloaders are

fatwallet.com

and

http://members.cox.net/dailyfreestuff/

macmanmike6100 01-29-2004 07:37 PM

this thread just seems a little skeevy because, at the very least, some "loss prevention" guy could be reading this and implement fixes for everything we write

MrFailure 02-06-2004 05:23 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by Stare At The Sun
Take 1 five dollar bill to a lamenating machine, lamenate it, and then leave about 4 foot of lament behind it, then shave the lament to the very edge of it, it must be very precise. you then just take it to a secluded change machine(car wash stations open 24/7 w/ no security cameras, a few counties away work well. Basically, just insert the bill, let the change come out, and then pull it back out. Repeat untill the machine is empty :).

Ahhh, fuck da system.

*note, just ask, i will clarify anything that is unclear

Why don't you just use a 20?
Now I need to find somewhere to laminate money

skier 02-06-2004 02:03 PM

freeloading at stealing are just degrees of theft. You either shitkick the system or not.

runawayfetus 02-25-2004 06:51 PM

usually... i have 10 friends waiting at the exit door of the actual theatre itself.. not the main lobby,... u know where the people exit after the movie is over. the officials cant see people waiting at these doors.. and one person buys a ticket and goes and lets everyone else in

aa1037 03-04-2004 04:44 PM

this thread was a very interesting read! personally, my friends and I have done the ticket tearing trick a few times - who wants to pay $9.50 for a movie now?! I remember when it was $7 on LI, and I'm just 18! ha

Zander 03-06-2004 12:32 PM

It's not illegal unless you get caught.

Here are some things I've thought of/heard of:

The switch in a store, my friend and I were buying sports gloves, and we just switched expensive ones into the cheap boxes while we were trying them on.

I also want to work in a store just so I can chase down and beat up people that try to steal shit =D

Zander 03-06-2004 12:40 PM

Also, when going to a store to buy a game that needs a CD key, just open the box, write down/text message/take a picture of the CD key and just have your friend burn you a copy of his old one.

Zander 03-06-2004 12:46 PM

And this really isn't a scam, but something funny to do:

At a Target/Wal-Mart etc. get a bunch of clothes with security tags and put them in a backpack, and when someone tries to buy the backpack they'll set off security alarms.

ols 03-10-2004 12:53 PM

this is the greatest thread ever

most of the people working at these stores dont care if you rip their employer off. i can vouche for k-mart. its also easier if you know someone that works there

agball 03-10-2004 01:06 PM

Free computer upgrades
 
This one works like a charm!! If you have a Costco near you go there and Purchase a new computer. Costco allows you to reutrn any computer within 6 months. They also are getting new models in with the latest technology all the time. 6 months after you buy it clean it out back it up with the DVD burner that it came with & return it to them for a full refund. Now go and look at what they have in stock and you will find the latest technology for the same price as the one you return. Get in line & buy the new one.

wakelagger 03-10-2004 07:00 PM

Yeah, my friend's dad does the Costco trick all the time. Goes in, creates a ruckus like only a German accented 60 year old can, and walks out with the latest in computer tech. Repeat 6 months later. He hasn't spent money on a new computer in three years, and he's gone through 5 or 6 generations of Costco computers.

runawayfetus 03-12-2004 03:24 PM

hah .. teh comp stuff seems like itd be too much work for me. Im to lazy to pack it upo and return it etc. id rather just steal it and get it over wtih

Devilinmypants 03-16-2004 05:58 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by 89transam
Some people can get two sodas almost every time by hitting the machines in the right spot. Thats what I wanna know how to do.

heres my small addition.Recently,I was dissatisfied with some taco bell so I called that 1800 number. ANyway I told them the problem and my name and address and how much the bill was (Around $5.00). I kid you not, the next day I had five bucks in taco bell gift certificates in the mail.

I hear this works with lots of other stuff too. All you have to do is call thier complaint/ suggestion line and they will send you free stuff.

As far as stealing goes, I have heard that as soon as you make it out of the door of certain stores (Best buy,Circuit city..etc) youre home free, they wont chase you , even if they saw you run out the door with a tv on your back. its just too much of a liability to chase you.

I did the same thing, except they sent a coupon for any one free item. The coupon however was just an inkjet printout. Easily photo copiable. I plan on using it when i visit tacobells during trips, you know to avoid the burrito police.

Devilinmypants 03-16-2004 06:01 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by merkerguitars
Ok this is a good trick.....if you want a certain piece of electronics for free but can't afford it get something that is broken. Then buy the exact same item (or something that looks really similar) and shove it in the box and return it. I have done this many times trading a broken older model sony radio for a newer one and swapping a lazar cd player for a jensen one.
I do this all of the time at wallmart, but they sell me crap that doesnt work, so its completely justified.

Devilinmypants 03-16-2004 06:07 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by costello
Please TFP do not try this at the frys electronics stores. My stepfather is the manager of loss prevention and comes home nearly everyday (proudly, which is sad) with stories of chases he's made in the parking lot. Yesterday he broke a guys arm slamming him into a wall.
Eckerds has a policy of no chasing shoplifters out of the door, and no physical contact with ones who are trying to flee. Management told me once that unless a manager sees somone shoplift it doesnt matter. (essentially because the employees cant be trusted with a matter as severe as spotting shoplifters.) This all varies by managers though. Some might be more fervent about loss prevention.

Devilinmypants 03-16-2004 06:12 AM

Quote:

Originally posted by turbodriven
These examples are from things I have noticed in the past.

UPS will issue an insurance claim settlement without actually verifying that the item was broken. However... I'm not sure what the insurance limit is for this. And furthermore... they do reserve the right to come inspect the item if they choose. My particular item was under $100 and they never came to inspect it. I imagine for higher insured items they would make it a point to come see it for themselves. Also I'm not sure if they track how many times a certain individual makes claims.

So.. the scam would involve sending something from work to your home address (a rock for all anyone cares). Filing a claim that your "whatever" was damaged upon reciept. Make sure you actually have a "whatever" that you could damage or already is damaged in case they actually come out to see it or take it. And voila... an instant $100.

Second scam is a story I heard from a friend.

Back to the Walmart thing. He actually got home with a set of stereo speakers that had nothing but a cinder block in the box. Either a store employee stole the speakers or walmart returned the speakers from a previous scammer and never verified the speakers box's contents before putting them back on the shelf. He returned them and got a different box with actual speakers in them.

So... again the scam would go like this. Buy a "whatever" from Walmart. Go home and swap contents with a couple of rocks. And return the box with rocks in it to Walmart and get a second set of "whatever" to do whatever with. Either use the "whatevers" or sell them on ebay.

Both of these seem very legit... no matter how morally wrong they are. No way on either end can it be proven that your up to malicious behavior.

The second is an easy way to get caught, you never want to return an item withou atleast the correct item in the box. Wallmart can match the return of an item with video of it being returned and get a photo ID of you. If you are going to return something to Wally world, buy a broken one first to put in the box.

Devilinmypants 03-16-2004 06:27 AM

I had a tagger friend go to walmart, load a buggy full of spraypaint and just push it passed the cashiers out of the building. He dumped it in his trunk and went back in for seconds, where the greedy bastard got caught. Yet another friend of mine was lawfully paying for items when the cashier forgot to ring up his photos because he didnt know how and this friend got stopped by walmart rentacops and ended up doing community service and being banned from walmart. Very odd how much security varies from store to store.

tehblaed 03-17-2004 10:54 PM

Quote:

Originally posted by Blistex
Ive never heard of companies giving away replacement equipment without first recieving the original.
Microsoft. I actually got 4 free Intellimice Optical Explorers out of this one, and to this date have still never purchased an Intellimouse Explorer.

By the way, I love each and every one of you.


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