rSlash - r/Maliciouscompliance I Found a Real-Life INFINITE MONEY Glitch
Episode Date: March 22, 2022r/Maliciouscompliance In today's episode, OP discovers a way to turn $1 into $5! It's a bit complicated, but basically he buys a $1 cookie, which earns him $1 in points. Then he does some online magic... to convert that $1 in points into $5 in Sears points, which allows him to spend $5 on whatever he wants in the store. He does this a thousand times and magically turns $1,000 into $5,000. FREE MONEY! Get $90 off and a free gift at Sunbasket! Go to sunbasket.com/rslash - Enter the promocode "rslash" at checkout. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to our Slash Militias Compliance, where OP discovers an in-real-life infinite money glitch.
Our next reddit postage from Duck Down Rob.
The year was 2000 in Canada.
One of the better grocery store chains,
law-blows had introduced their new President's Choice PC Points Reward program.
This was tied into their PC Financial Mastercard.
There was a month-long promotion where you could get bonus points for purchasing select items. One of these items was their signature President's Choice Decadent Chocolate
Chip Cookies. These are amazing cookies that are still around today. The offer was, for
every bag of cookies purchased for the regular price of $199, you got 1,000 PC points when
you use your PC financial mastercard.
Those 1000 PC points would later be worth $1 for redemption.
I noticed a loophole, and I started some major malicious compliance with their promotion.
I started by going from store to store and buying every bag of cookies I could find.
I even asked if they had cases in the back.
From one store, I was able to get
8 cases. I ended up getting 1400 packages of cookies over a 3 week period before the program broke.
Having 1400 packages of cookies created a problem. What was I going to do with all these cookies that I
bought for $199? At the time, I was a field sales rep for a company with four factories in the province.
I ended up selling most of the cookies for $1 package to the employees.
They thought that it was a great deal and they couldn't get enough.
So onto the points.
Every couple of days, the bonus points would show up into my PC points accounts.
I realized that I could take my PC points and convert them online from PC points
to petro points. Petro points were part of this gas station reward program. Once I had
100,000 PC points, I would convert them to 100,000 petro points. I would then go online
into my petro points account and convert those points into Sears Club points. Eventually,
I would redeem the Sears Club points for vouchers that could be used for in-store purchases at Sears Club Points. Eventually, I would redeem the Sears Club Points for vouchers that could
be used for in-store purchases at Sears. So, basically, I bought one pack of cookies for $2.
I sold the package of cookies for $1. This earned me $1 in PC points. Then, I exchanged the $1
in petro points to $5 in Sears Club Points. So, basically, every time OP spent $2 on cookies, he got $5
back. Eventually, Petro, Canada caught on and immediately stopped all conversions to Sears
for everyone. No more points could be converted. It was even marked as not available on their websites.
I called Petro Points when I found out, and after a little discussion,
I was allowed one final conversion. It was a fun three weeks while it lasted. Then, beneath that,
we have this story from MoralTack. You used to be able to order commemorative coins,
like silver dollars, state quarters, etc. from the US meant at close to face value with free shipping.
Legally, they're still considered currencies,
so the plan went like this.
First, you'd buy a thousand dollars worth of quarters
on a credit card and have them shipped to your house for free.
Then you'd get a thousand dollars worth of reward points
on airline miles or whatever.
Then you deposit the quarters at the bank
because they're still quarters.
Then you use that money to pay off the credit card and repeat.
People racked up millions of free points before they closed the loophole.
Our next reddit postage from Spoods McBeath.
So my first job I ever worked at for a few years was a grocery retail store with several
different departments, including a deli for lunch, meat, and cheese, which is where I worked.
One night I was working 1pm to 9pm.
9pm is when the deli and other special apartments closed, and we're expected to be done
and clocked out, but the rest of the store remained open 24-7 for general groceries.
It was me and one other guy, and we had an especially busy night.
We were a little behind on our cleaning as a result, but we had our meat slicing machines
already coated with sanitizer after working for like 15 minutes to get all those little
meat chunks and shavings out of every crevice, because we were pretty serious about making
sure those things were as clean as they could be.
It was about 855 at that point.
We were almost late to leave, and the store we worked for did not like over time.
If you were getting any amount of over time, you would get chewed out for it the next day,
even if it was just a little amount of over time.
A woman walks up to the counter and starts looking through the product, as we had a glass
case filled with a bunch of types of our lunch meat, pre-slice, and ready to go.
She looks at one and says,
I went this turkey right here, but I went it freshly
sliced. I, of course, look over at my coworker, and we both look over at the two slicers,
which are still covered in sanitizer. I tell her, well, ma'am, we really can't do that
right now. Our slicers are both being cleaned at the moment because our department is closed
in five minutes, but I'd be glad to get you something here from our cold case.
So you're not going to slice it fresh for me, is that what you're saying?
I replied, that's correct, I apologize. Without another word, she walks off, and me and my
co-worker go back to what we were doing. We finish cleaning and go home after about five more minutes,
narrowly clocking out on time.
Fast forward two days later, me and that same coworker come in and start getting to work
like a normal day.
About 3pm, two hours into my shift, I personally get called into the Hidhuncho's office.
The store director as they're titled.
I think nothing of it, head upstairs, go inside the office, and sit down.
The store director hands me a piece of paper and says,
tell me what caused this.
I look at the paper and it's a printed out screenshot
of a Google review for our store, one star out of five,
and a full paragraph from that lady from two nights
before complaining that she didn't get her freshly sliced meat
from the rude employee, and then described specifically me. I explained exactly what happened two
nights ago. The director is getting heated and begins to cut me off while I'm speaking,
asking, why would slicers be covered in sanitizer at 855? You're scheduled to work until 9 p.m. I said yeah, I am, but seeing as though I'm constantly being reminded not to get any over time
I usually start cleaning them around 8.30 p.m. The director gets even more upset and she raises her voice
I don't care. That's not how it works. If you have a customer, you serve them. And you had better make sure those shelves are failed before you leave,
or you will not be working here anymore.
Now get out!
I'm pretty salty at this point.
I go back down to the deli, and my coworker asks what happened, and I told him.
He says, so they want everything done before we leave?
I said, yep.
And without another word, he knew what we
needed to do. 9 p.m. hits as usual and our shelves are at their usual standard of half
full. But seeing as though we've been given a new standard, we decided to stay and make
sure that we did what we were instructed to do. We spent the next several hours past closing
time, slicing, slicing, and slicing. Until every single
tray of meat and cheese was completely full. We also had these plastic totes in the big
fridge full of cheese that we sliced that were wrapped up in half pound blocks for ease of sale.
So, we decided to fill up that thing too with every single type of cheese that we had available.
We cut up like 70 pounds of cheese
and wrapped it up in the fridge.
We also had a subway style sandwich counter where we made sandwiches to order and also pre-made
on the shelves for sale.
We made double the usual amount of sandwiches and filled the shelves, as per requested.
Not a single shelf had an empty spot on it by the time that we were done. After every single possible item in shelf was as full as it could be,
we finally started to clean and close.
It was around 3am when we finally left.
The department opens at 5am.
We were exhausted, but our spiteful overtime venture made us feel pretty good.
We each got about six hours of overtime in.
They hated anyone getting even 5 or 10 minutes of overtime.
We both came in the next day at 1pm as usual, expecting complete retaliation.
But nope, instead our manager kind of saunters over to us and says,
Hey, uh, you should be good to start cleaning up at 8.30 like usual.
I think the director got the point you made.
Normally, overtime would be asked to be taken care of by clocking out for lunches
are coming in later than usual, but they let us keep all six hours of that overtime.
They never said anything to us about overtime after that.
I accepted a job that paid
almost double about six months after this incident, and I never went back to retail hell.
Our next red-appost is from Kesar. This story isn't mine, but my girlfriend's parents. They were
going to build a house and a new development in a lot that was in front of their soon-to-be neighbors.
The lot was on a hill, so it's in front of their neighbors, but below them. The neighbors decided they wanted to build a one-story rancher on the lower part of their
lot, instead of building something like a two-story on the higher side of the lot.
They assumed that whoever was going to build in front of them would only build a one-story
themselves, which would keep their view unobstructed.
Having a great view was apparently very important to them, and a big selling point for the
lot. My girlfriend's parents started to build and a big selling point for the lot.
My girlfriend's parents started to build their two-story house on their lot with tall,
peaked cables.
When the neighbors realized that their view would indeed be obstructed, they offered to buy
the lot off of her parents.
Her parents offered them the price of the lot, which had increased in value since it was
originally purchased.
Plus, the cost of the materials already purchased for the bill. They waited for a response, but they didn't get one, so they just continued
on with their bill. A month or two later, the neighbors responded the offer saying they'll
accept it. By this time, of course, more time and money has been put into the bill, so
her parents told them they can still buy the lot, but the price has increased. The neighbors
reject the offer.
In this new development, all houses are required to have a two-foot overhang, but many of
the homes haven't actually been following the rule, and the developers haven't been
enforcing it.
My girlfriend's parents decided to also not follow the rule.
The neighbors then went to the developer to remind them that her parents need to have
two-foot overhangs, thanking that this would decrease the angle of the roof, meaning the gables wouldn't
be so high. The developer told her parents to make sure they have two foot overhangs. Her parents
go to the architect to find a way to keep all those tall gables they wanted, while also having the
two foot overhangs. The architect tells them to just raise the roof to feet to create the two foot overhangs
so the angles of the roof won't be impacted at all.
And her parents just keep building with these new specifications.
The developers approached her parents to inquire about the overhangs and if their roof was
impacted at all.
The look on his face when her parents told him they had just raised the entire roof by
two feet was
priceless.
The neighbors avoided her family the entire five years they lived there.
Our next red-appost is from Fred Sam.
A long time ago, I worked at a company that gave me a retirement account through Fidelity.
I eventually changed jobs to a different company that provided a retirement account through
a different provider.
So I call it Fidelity to roll my old account funds into my new one. Fidelity can do that for me, but there's
a $50 account closing fee. Why do they have an account closing fee? Because F me, that's
why. I tried to be clever and say, okay, leave $1 in the account, but they require a $50 minimum in case you do want to close it at a later date.
Cue malicious compliance.
Okay, roll over all my funds, accept the $50.
Keep my account open.
Send me quarterly updates on my $50.
Invest it. Make it grow.
I now have a tradition.
Once a year, I call fidelity to transfer over all
but fifty dollars of my account balance, usually just to check for a few bucks. By this point,
I've cost them way more than fifty bucks of service, postage, and checks they've mailed to me.
But I still have a few decades to retirement. Let's see how much more I can cost them before
they give me my fifty bucks. I'll go to my grave with that account still open if it means fidelity never gets the account closing fee.
Why? Because FM. Well OP, they say that one of the hardest things about retirement is you get bored
and you need to find a hobby, but it sounds like you've already got a hobby lined up.
Our next reddit post is from AF Cheddarhead. I work as a consulting engineer
who designs and implement system upgrades
for organizations with worldwide locations.
When my company initially hired me,
the agreement was that I would get paid
for every hour that I worked.
Usually 40 hours a week when I was at the home side,
but up to over 80 hours per week
when at the customer's location.
I got no extra overtime paid,
just straight hourly time
because my position was exempt.
While on-site,
I would also be paid for lodging,
mileage, food, and a rental car.
These extra expenses, called MIE,
can add up to a couple thousand dollars a week
in places like Hawaii, Japan, or England.
Flash forward a few years, and the company has been bought and merged a couple of times.
The new company decides that exempt employees are now salary employees, and they will not
pay for any hours over 40 hours.
Plus, of course, no discussion of negotiating a new rate due to the change in working conditions.
This decision reduces my annual compensation by over $20,000 per year, because I would
be at a customer's site for like four to six months a year.
I walk into my boss's office to discuss the problem, and he says there's nothing to discuss.
The next time I worked at a customer's site, the plan was for me and my team to work 40
hours a week, meaning an additional 3 weeks on site.
Neither the customer nor my boss were happy.
The additional 3 week delay added over $50,000 in MIE expenses, because it's just me there
to do the work, and the number of billable hours remains the same if I'm there for four weeks or seven weeks.
Sorry, but if you only pay me for 40 hours, then I only work 40 hours.
A couple of VPs were quickly brought into the conversation, and the new policy was quickly
modified.
Now, we get paid for every hour that we work.
That was our slash malicious compliance.
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