I had NEVER visited this company's website and had never heard of them till I tried to send a free Christmas greetings e-card on the 123greetings site. 123greetings site said the card I'd picked was free and to confirm this was the card I wanted to send. I clicked confirm and was immediately told I'd signed up for £50 pm with this quick-tutor. Then got an email from quick tutor saying thank you for your subscription and the service charge is £11 bi weekly. I contacted my fraud dept at the bank and 123greetings and quick tutor. 123greetings sent a totally weird email telling me this is normal for their free site and it's called "Click jacking". The bank said I better cancel my card so I have... Over Christmas now card less!! And just now quick-tutor said they've cancelled the subscription. Warning... Their free trial lasts 24 hours. Had I not acted so quickly they'd have taken £50 and kept it!! This is quite literally online robbery. I think 123greetings are highly negligent too. click jacking is another way of saying it's online robbery. So beware quick-tutor and 133greetings.suggest avoid.
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