Don't have Amazon Prime? Students can get a
free 6-Month Amazon Prime trial with free 2-day shipping, unlimited video streaming & more.
If you're not a student, there's also a
free 1-Month Amazon Prime trial available.
You can also earn cash back rewards on Amazon and Whole Foods purchases with the
Amazon Prime Visa credit card. Read our review to see if it’s the right card for you.
24 Comments
Your comment cannot be blank.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
https://www.amazon.com/Cascade-Pl...0CP33TNQ3/
...what does mountain smell like?
Lol- good point. Taken literally, some parts of mountains smell like death...
https://www.amazon.com/Cascade-Pl...0CP33TNQ3/
"This is a new product - "Platinum Plus". It's never been any size but this. "
Rebates are legalized scamming and there is no reason in today's world for providing a date of birth. Companies expect a certain percentage to submit wrong, not submit, etc.
Platinum Plus is not new. For a while it was unavailable.
https://news.pg.com/news-releases...faul
Haha, creative suggestion.
Hate to be a Debbie downer on this, but please keep in mind that it's possible it's a crime of some sort providing false information on these submissions, so I try not to get into that.
While it's unlikely there will be any repercussions, it's asinine to have to provide such levels of personal information to get a $15 rebate.
I've done a higher P&G rebate previously from Sam's Club purchases, and date of birth wasn't required back then.
The are getting more and more invasive now, just to get your data accurate, so they can sell that data.
Frack them.
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Hate to be a Debbie downer on this, but please keep in mind that it's possible it's a crime of some sort providing false information on these submissions, so I try not to get into that.
While it's unlikely there will be any repercussions, it's asinine to have to provide such levels of personal information to get a $15 rebate.
I've done a higher P&G rebate previously from Sam's Club purchases, and date of birth wasn't required back then.
The are getting more and more invasive now, just to get your data accurate, so they can sell that data.
Frack them.
The birthday check is probably to make sure you are 18. I can't imagine any court would impose any sanctions for a rebate on soap. No crime involved on legal purchases.
The crime is not on purchasing products, but possibly the wrong information provided in claiming a rebate which possibly could come under mail fraud related or perjury related laws. Check their terms and conditions.
Not a lawyer, but it's pretty clear it's not right to provide incorrect information.
Not a lawyer, but it's pretty clear it's not right to provide incorrect information.
Mail FRAUD is just that fraud. This is just claiming your personal rebate with your name and address but a bs birthday because they have no right to it. They have no way of knowing what your real birthday is, so the company cannot say it's right or not. You would not be claiming any more rebates that what their limit is, so not fraud.