Data Entry

Copy & Pasting Job(repost) By jlaughingduck on Dec 5 Max Bid: $63.75

LongDesc: 

You will be taking information from one website and copying to another. At the same time making sure any info (on the site that you are pasting to) that is there already is accruate. About 1500 items may be less.To be clear you will be It would consist of copying the image, description, and pricing information directly from the front end from one website to another.
Worker: On pay-for-deliverable
projects, all deliverables must be
uploaded to
vWorker.com before the
deadline(s)Â…with no exceptions. If
this contract makes it impossible
to do this (for example if it is
for a service that cannot be
uploaded), then do not start
this project. Otherwise, you
may find
yourself unprotected by the
payment guarantee.
Instead, ask the employer
to switch this project to
pay-for-time, so you are
guaranteed payment. If the
employer will not switch this, then
please alert us.
(Click here for more details...)

Example of unprotected/un-guaranteed work:
Imagine that this project is to
install something on the employers
website.
You do the work but upload nothing
to vWorker.com (because it takes too
long,
or you cannot). As long as there is
no dispute, you will not notice the
potential problem. But if the
employer disputes what you did then
we must make sure you delivered to the
triple-point-guarantee (100% to-contract: and
done in the industry exepcted manner, and
by the deadline). If the employer
does not allow us access to their
website, or accidentally/deliberately
changes the work you did on their
website, when we go to test it, we
will see that it does not work.
Then you would have no proof that
you delivered the final deliverables,
lose the arbitration, the escrowed
funds and receive a poor rating
(which will say “testing showed
the final deliverables did not
work”).
So for this reason,
you should have instead followed
the above instructions and
switched it to pay-for-time.
Had you done this, we would simply
have checked the Accutimcard to
make sure you punched-in the time
and were working on it. You would
have been paid for every hour
you worked.

Remember that contacting the other party outside of the site (by email, phone, etc.) on all outsourcing pay-for-deliverables projects violation of both the employer and worker agreements.
vWorker.com monitors all site activity for such violations and can instantly expel transgressors on the spot, so we thank you in advance for your cooperation.
If you notice a violation please help out the site and report it. Thanks for your help.

Categories:

The categories were created by the employer, but sometimes mistakes occur.
If any of these categories are incorrect, please
report it and let us know.

Like everything else on this page, these categories are part of the original contract
for this project.

Data entry, Administrative support
Legal:
1) Employer will receive exclusive and complete copyrights to all work paid for. All paid for deliverables will be considered 'work made for hire' under U.S. Copyright law.
1b) No part of the deliverable may contain any copyright restricted 3rd party components (including GPL, GNU, Copyleft, etc.) unless all copyright ramifications are explained AND AGREED TO by the employer on the site per the worker's 'Worker Legal Agreement'.

Copy & Pasting Job By jlaughingduck on Dec 5 Max Bid: $63.75

LongDesc: 

You will be taking information from one website and copying to another. At the same time making sure any info (on the site that you are pasting to) that is there already is accruate. About 1500 items may be less.
Worker: On pay-for-deliverable
projects, all deliverables must be
uploaded to
vWorker.com before the
deadline(s)Â…with no exceptions. If
this contract makes it impossible
to do this (for example if it is
for a service that cannot be
uploaded), then do not start
this project. Otherwise, you
may find
yourself unprotected by the
payment guarantee.
Instead, ask the employer
to switch this project to
pay-for-time, so you are
guaranteed payment. If the
employer will not switch this, then
please alert us.
(Click here for more details...)

Example of unprotected/un-guaranteed work:
Imagine that this project is to
install something on the employers
website.
You do the work but upload nothing
to vWorker.com (because it takes too
long,
or you cannot). As long as there is
no dispute, you will not notice the
potential problem. But if the
employer disputes what you did then
we must make sure you delivered to the
triple-point-guarantee (100% to-contract: and
done in the industry exepcted manner, and
by the deadline). If the employer
does not allow us access to their
website, or accidentally/deliberately
changes the work you did on their
website, when we go to test it, we
will see that it does not work.
Then you would have no proof that
you delivered the final deliverables,
lose the arbitration, the escrowed
funds and receive a poor rating
(which will say “testing showed
the final deliverables did not
work”).
So for this reason,
you should have instead followed
the above instructions and
switched it to pay-for-time.
Had you done this, we would simply
have checked the Accutimcard to
make sure you punched-in the time
and were working on it. You would
have been paid for every hour
you worked.

Remember that contacting the other party outside of the site (by email, phone, etc.) on all outsourcing pay-for-deliverables projects violation of both the employer and worker agreements.
vWorker.com monitors all site activity for such violations and can instantly expel transgressors on the spot, so we thank you in advance for your cooperation.
If you notice a violation please help out the site and report it. Thanks for your help.

Categories:

The categories were created by the employer, but sometimes mistakes occur.
If any of these categories are incorrect, please
report it and let us know.

Like everything else on this page, these categories are part of the original contract
for this project.

Data entry, Administrative support
Legal:
1) Employer will receive exclusive and complete copyrights to all work paid for. All paid for deliverables will be considered 'work made for hire' under U.S. Copyright law.
1b) No part of the deliverable may contain any copyright restricted 3rd party components (including GPL, GNU, Copyleft, etc.) unless all copyright ramifications are explained AND AGREED TO by the employer on the site per the worker's 'Worker Legal Agreement'.

MAPPING PLACEMARKS IN GOOGLE EARTH By AnthonyFD on Dec 5 Max Bid: Open to fair suggestions

LongDesc: 

You will need to map placemarks on golf course maps in the Google Earth application following a given set of guidelines (which will be explained in a video).
We need approximately 500 golf courses mapped.
A quick & simple way to make money. Simply adding placemarks onto the maps.
The idea is to pay $0.50 per mapped hole on a golf course. There are on average 18 holes on a golf course. We need 500 courses mapped, so that's on average 9000 holes x $0.50 = $4,500 to be earned.
Worker: On pay-for-deliverable
projects, all deliverables must be
uploaded to
vWorker.com before the
deadline(s)Â…with no exceptions. If
this contract makes it impossible
to do this (for example if it is
for a service that cannot be
uploaded), then do not start
this project. Otherwise, you
may find
yourself unprotected by the
payment guarantee.
Instead, ask the employer
to switch this project to
pay-for-time, so you are
guaranteed payment. If the
employer will not switch this, then
please alert us.
(Click here for more details...)

Example of unprotected/un-guaranteed work:
Imagine that this project is to
install something on the employers
website.
You do the work but upload nothing
to vWorker.com (because it takes too
long,
or you cannot). As long as there is
no dispute, you will not notice the
potential problem. But if the
employer disputes what you did then
we must make sure you delivered to the
triple-point-guarantee (100% to-contract: and
done in the industry exepcted manner, and
by the deadline). If the employer
does not allow us access to their
website, or accidentally/deliberately
changes the work you did on their
website, when we go to test it, we
will see that it does not work.
Then you would have no proof that
you delivered the final deliverables,
lose the arbitration, the escrowed
funds and receive a poor rating
(which will say “testing showed
the final deliverables did not
work”).
So for this reason,
you should have instead followed
the above instructions and
switched it to pay-for-time.
Had you done this, we would simply
have checked the Accutimcard to
make sure you punched-in the time
and were working on it. You would
have been paid for every hour
you worked.

Categories:

The categories were created by the employer, but sometimes mistakes occur.
If any of these categories are incorrect, please
report it and let us know.

Like everything else on this page, these categories are part of the original contract
for this project.

Data entry, Administrative support, Other (Administrative support)
Expert Guarantee Required:
     It is crucial to the employer that this entire project be completed (100%) by the deadline of 90 days. They only want expert workers who will commit themselves to this deadline to bid.
If you are not an expert or unable to commit completely to the deadline, then DO NOT BID on this project.
     If you are an expert and can commit, the employer would like you to demonstrate this by making an Expert Guarantee of at least 10% of your bid. (This would not need to be made now...but only if and when you are selected as the winning bidder).
If you complete the job (100% by the deadline), then your deposit would be refunded to you. If you do not, then you would forfeit the deposit and it would go to cover the employer's cancellation charge and the remainder donated to a non-profit charity.
     Please note that depending on how you choose to make the deposit, there may be a small, non-refundable processing fee. This fee can be reduced or eliminated by choosing a less
expensive method of payment. Or, you may wish to ask the employer to cover the cost of the fee for you. You can do this in a number of ways such as: increasing the price of your bid, asking the employer to post a 2nd project to cover it (contingent on completion of the project), or by getting the employer to promise to pay the fee to you as a bonus (upon completion of the project). If you choose the bonus route, just remember that due to credit card/PayPal rules, vWorker.com CANNOT force an employer to pay a bonus involuntarily...even when promised on-site. So don't choose this option, unless you trust the employer, or are willing to take a small risk.
     This is just a very brief overview of how the Expert Guarantee works and there are many more details that you need to understand fully before you bid on this project.
DO NOT BID on this project until you've read and fully understand everything about the Expert Guarantee (including reading the contract and the FAQs).
Legal:
1) Employer will receive exclusive and complete copyrights to all work paid for. All paid for deliverables will be considered 'work made for hire' under U.S. Copyright law.
1b) No part of the deliverable may contain any copyright restricted 3rd party components (including GPL, GNU, Copyleft, etc.) unless all copyright ramifications are explained AND AGREED TO by the employer on the site per the worker's 'Worker Legal Agreement'.

Social bookmarkings 5x40 By vtown on Dec 5 Max Bid: $2

LongDesc: 

Boomark 5 URLS
- Each URL on 40 different social bookmarking sites
- all social bookmarking sites must be PR5+, on different URL, not those apparent cookie cutter sites.
- register an free gmail account and unique ID for this project.
- send report with published URL containing all links and account ID/pass (including email.)
Worker: On pay-for-deliverable
projects, all deliverables must be
uploaded to
vWorker.com before the
deadline(s)Â…with no exceptions. If
this contract makes it impossible
to do this (for example if it is
for a service that cannot be
uploaded), then do not start
this project. Otherwise, you
may find
yourself unprotected by the
payment guarantee.
Instead, ask the employer
to switch this project to
pay-for-time, so you are
guaranteed payment. If the
employer will not switch this, then
please alert us.
(Click here for more details...)

Example of unprotected/un-guaranteed work:
Imagine that this project is to
install something on the employers
website.
You do the work but upload nothing
to vWorker.com (because it takes too
long,
or you cannot). As long as there is
no dispute, you will not notice the
potential problem. But if the
employer disputes what you did then
we must make sure you delivered to the
triple-point-guarantee (100% to-contract: and
done in the industry exepcted manner, and
by the deadline). If the employer
does not allow us access to their
website, or accidentally/deliberately
changes the work you did on their
website, when we go to test it, we
will see that it does not work.
Then you would have no proof that
you delivered the final deliverables,
lose the arbitration, the escrowed
funds and receive a poor rating
(which will say “testing showed
the final deliverables did not
work”).
So for this reason,
you should have instead followed
the above instructions and
switched it to pay-for-time.
Had you done this, we would simply
have checked the Accutimcard to
make sure you punched-in the time
and were working on it. You would
have been paid for every hour
you worked.

Remember that contacting the other party outside of the site (by email, phone, etc.) on all outsourcing pay-for-deliverables projects violation of both the employer and worker agreements.
vWorker.com monitors all site activity for such violations and can instantly expel transgressors on the spot, so we thank you in advance for your cooperation.
If you notice a violation please help out the site and report it. Thanks for your help.

Categories:

The categories were created by the employer, but sometimes mistakes occur.
If any of these categories are incorrect, please
report it and let us know.

Like everything else on this page, these categories are part of the original contract
for this project.

Data entry, Administrative support
Legal:
1) Employer will receive exclusive and complete copyrights to all work paid for. All paid for deliverables will be considered 'work made for hire' under U.S. Copyright law.
1b) No part of the deliverable may contain any copyright restricted 3rd party components (including GPL, GNU, Copyleft, etc.) unless all copyright ramifications are explained AND AGREED TO by the employer on the site per the worker's 'Worker Legal Agreement'.

LCI y Ama de casa By Meg19 on Dec 5 Max Bid: Open to fair suggestions

LongDesc: 

Me gustaria trabajar con la confianza de que mi trabajo sera bien elaborado y con grandes espectativas Remember that contacting the other party outside of the site (by email, phone, etc.) on all outsourcing pay-for-deliverables projects violation of both the employer and worker agreements.
vWorker.com monitors all site activity for such violations and can instantly expel transgressors on the spot, so we thank you in advance for your cooperation.
If you notice a violation please help out the site and report it. Thanks for your help.

Categories:

The categories were created by the employer, but sometimes mistakes occur.
If any of these categories are incorrect, please
report it and let us know.

Like everything else on this page, these categories are part of the original contract
for this project.

Data entry, Sales and marketing, Market research and surveys, Personal assistant / Virtual assistant, Other, Writing thank you cards, Administrative support, Business services, Customer Service, Order processing
Legal:
1) Employer will receive exclusive and complete copyrights to all work paid for. All paid for deliverables will be considered 'work made for hire' under U.S. Copyright law.
1b) No part of the deliverable may contain any copyright restricted 3rd party components (including GPL, GNU, Copyleft, etc.) unless all copyright ramifications are explained AND AGREED TO by the employer on the site per the worker's 'Worker Legal Agreement'.

University Research and report By cwstar88 on Dec 5 Max Bid: Open to fair suggestions

LongDesc: 

Hi,
I need someone to write a 1200-1500 word report on a university of my choice. This is more information gathering and then putting everything together in a cohesive manner rather than writing everything out from scratch. The main sources for the report will the:
- The universities website
- University partner websites
- Press releases and articles found on the web
- Other search research
- Any other intuitive ideas you might have
The report is to be in the following format. Here are some key questions to help you with the content that is needed
Background Information
What is the brief of the university?
How did it get started?
Who are they?
What are they about?
What are the different campuses?
What subjects do they teach?
What development work do they have going on?
What are the different faculties?
Students
How many students do they have?
What are the numbers for each faculty?
What do they do for their students?
What are they trying to do for their students?
What do students say about the university?
Who runs everything?
The staff
How many staff do they have?
Who are the main leadership team?
Who runs each faculty?
What is the hierarchy at the university?
The community
What do they do for the local community?
Why?
What plans have they got in this area?
Culture and values
What is the culture at the university?
What are their values?
This is it. If all goes well then more work could easily be provided as I have a few universities I would like to approach.
If you have any questions please let me know I am happy to answer
Requirements Interview Answers:

To help you bid more accurately, the employer was interviewed about the requirements for this project. Below are their answers.

Untitled Page

//<![CDATA[
var theForm = document.forms['form1'];
if (!theForm) {
theForm = document.form1;
}
function __doPostBack(eventTarget, eventArgument) {
if (!theForm.onsubmit || (theForm.onsubmit() != false)) {
theForm.__EVENTTARGET.value = eventTarget;
theForm.__EVENTARGUMENT.value = eventArgument;
theForm.submit();
}
}
//]]>

Project Type:
What kind of work do you need done?
Legal:
1) Quality of writing: All English writing-related deliverables MUST be of grammatical, structural and logical quality commensurate with written English in a professional journal (unless otherwise stated by the employer). If you are a non-native English speaker you are HIGHLY CAUTIONED AGAINST bidding, unless you are 100% certain that you can provide this level of writing.
2) Writing Copyright: All deliverables MUST be completely your own original work and may not be taken (in whole or in part) from any work that you do not have full and complete copyrights to (unless otherwise stated by the employer).
2a) You may not quote material from other sources unless the employer explicitly gives you permission to do so. If they do, you must surround that material with quotes and cite the source with enough detail so it can be verified.
2b) You may not paraphrase from other sources unless the employer explicitly gives you permission to do so. If they do, you must follow generally accepted standards for paraphrasing. Merely rearranging words and phrases from another source is considered plagiarism and is illegal. To correctly paraphrase, you should read the original and then close the book/source so you cannot see it and then write the entire material from scratch using your own words. (Note: Paraphrasing is legal by U.S. law when the work is considered 'Fair Use'...which generally means it will NOT be used commercially and ONLY for educational purposes. On the other hand, if you may know or suspect the work may not be 'Fair Use', please inform or consult with vWorker
2c) If you infringe any copyright you will forfeit all escrowed funds under the terms of 'fraud' in your contract and may have your account suspended. DO NOT BID ON THIS PROJECT unless you fully understand United States copyright law and it's ramifications to you.
3) Employer will receive exclusive and complete copyrights to all work paid for. All paid for deliverables will be considered 'work made for hire' under U.S. Copyright law.
3b) No part of the deliverable may contain any copyright restricted 3rd party components (including GPL, GNU, Copyleft, etc.) unless all copyright ramifications are explained AND AGREED TO by the employer on the site per the worker's 'Worker Legal Agreement'.

Syndicate content