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#online-income — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #online-income, aggregated by home.social.

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  1. 💻 Online income is no longer just a dream — with the right skills and consistency, anyone can start earning from home.
    🌍 Blogging, affiliate marketing, freelancing, and content creation are opening new opportunities every day.
    🚀 Start today, learn daily, and build your digital future.

    🔗rb.gy/y66yba

    #OnlineIncome

  2. 💻 Online income is no longer just a dream — with the right skills and consistency, anyone can start earning from home.
    🌍 Blogging, affiliate marketing, freelancing, and content creation are opening new opportunities every day.
    🚀 Start today, learn daily, and build your digital future.

    🔗urlkub.co/gjX9bY

    #OnlineIncome #DigitalMarketin

  3. GPT means Get Paid To — real online earning where companies pay you for simple tasks. No fees, no gimmicks, no “VIP access.” Just legit tasks that actually pay. I break it down fast and clearly in this video so you know what’s real and what’s fake.

    Find verified GPT options at Annika’s Work From Home. #GetPaidTo #GPTExplained #WorkFromHome #LegitEarning #OnlineIncome #AnnikasWFH #NoScams #EarnFromHome #SideHustles youtu.be/QIph0FLpPOs

  4. Anti-Competition by Design

    By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News

    Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — May 6, 2026

    Competition is what keeps markets honest. When users can move freely, platforms must earn loyalty through better service. On X, that freedom has narrowed. The system increasingly rewards staying inside one ecosystem and quietly punishes anyone who tries to operate outside it.

    This essay explains how that design works and why it harms Filipino creators, journalists, and small businesses.

    How Lock-In Replaces Competition

    Healthy platforms compete for users by improving tools, reliability, and trust. Unhealthy ones compete by making exit costly.

    On X, creators who post links to outside sites often see reduced reach. Accounts that encourage audiences to follow them elsewhere grow more slowly. Over time, users learn an unspoken rule: keep everything inside the platform or accept penalties.

    This is not open competition. It is enforced dependence.

    Why This Matters More in the Philippines

    Filipino creators rarely rely on a single income source. Many combine writing, freelancing, donations, and small online sales. That requires moving audiences between platforms.

    When one platform blocks that movement, it blocks income. A creator may have followers, but no way to convert that attention into support elsewhere. The platform keeps the audience. The creator carries the risk.

    This imbalance is especially damaging in lower-income markets.

    Small Businesses Face the Same Wall

    Local businesses use social media to reach customers, then send them to websites, booking pages, or messaging apps. When those links are suppressed, business slows.

    Owners often do not know why traffic drops. They blame themselves, not the platform. Meanwhile, the platform keeps users scrolling instead of buying.

    Anti-competitive design is most effective when it is quiet.

    Choice Without Real Freedom

    Supporters often argue that users can leave at any time. In theory, that is true. In practice, audiences are locked in.

    Years of work, followers, and reputation are tied to one system. Leaving means starting over. Staying means accepting rules that favor the platform over the user.

    That is not free choice. It is constrained choice.

    Why This Is a Business Failure

    Markets grow when value flows in many directions. Platforms that block movement limit growth for everyone except themselves.

    For Filipino users, this means fewer options, lower income, and higher risk. For the platform, it means declining trust and long-term instability.

    Anti-competition may protect control in the short term, but it weakens the ecosystem over time.

    Looking Ahead

    The next essay will examine how these same design choices affect advertisers and why many brands avoid platforms with unpredictable and restrictive behavior.

    When competition is designed out of the system, users always pay the price.

    For more social commentary, please see Occupy 2.5 at https://Occupy25.com

    This essay will be archived in the WPS News Archives at Amazon.

    References (APA)

    European Commission. (2023). Digital Markets Act and platform competition. https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu

    Electronic Frontier Foundation. (2023). Competition and platform lock-in. https://www.eff.org

    Reuters. (2024). Brands rethink spending on X amid policy changes. https://www.reuters.com

    #anticompetition #creatorEconomy #digitalMarkets #internetPlatforms #marketPower #onlineIncome #Philippines #platformEconomics #smallBusinesses #socialMediaPlatforms #Twitter #XPlatform
  5. Anti-Competition by Design

    By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News

    Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — May 6, 2026

    Competition is what keeps markets honest. When users can move freely, platforms must earn loyalty through better service. On X, that freedom has narrowed. The system increasingly rewards staying inside one ecosystem and quietly punishes anyone who tries to operate outside it.

    This essay explains how that design works and why it harms Filipino creators, journalists, and small businesses.

    How Lock-In Replaces Competition

    Healthy platforms compete for users by improving tools, reliability, and trust. Unhealthy ones compete by making exit costly.

    On X, creators who post links to outside sites often see reduced reach. Accounts that encourage audiences to follow them elsewhere grow more slowly. Over time, users learn an unspoken rule: keep everything inside the platform or accept penalties.

    This is not open competition. It is enforced dependence.

    Why This Matters More in the Philippines

    Filipino creators rarely rely on a single income source. Many combine writing, freelancing, donations, and small online sales. That requires moving audiences between platforms.

    When one platform blocks that movement, it blocks income. A creator may have followers, but no way to convert that attention into support elsewhere. The platform keeps the audience. The creator carries the risk.

    This imbalance is especially damaging in lower-income markets.

    Small Businesses Face the Same Wall

    Local businesses use social media to reach customers, then send them to websites, booking pages, or messaging apps. When those links are suppressed, business slows.

    Owners often do not know why traffic drops. They blame themselves, not the platform. Meanwhile, the platform keeps users scrolling instead of buying.

    Anti-competitive design is most effective when it is quiet.

    Choice Without Real Freedom

    Supporters often argue that users can leave at any time. In theory, that is true. In practice, audiences are locked in.

    Years of work, followers, and reputation are tied to one system. Leaving means starting over. Staying means accepting rules that favor the platform over the user.

    That is not free choice. It is constrained choice.

    Why This Is a Business Failure

    Markets grow when value flows in many directions. Platforms that block movement limit growth for everyone except themselves.

    For Filipino users, this means fewer options, lower income, and higher risk. For the platform, it means declining trust and long-term instability.

    Anti-competition may protect control in the short term, but it weakens the ecosystem over time.

    Looking Ahead

    The next essay will examine how these same design choices affect advertisers and why many brands avoid platforms with unpredictable and restrictive behavior.

    When competition is designed out of the system, users always pay the price.

    For more social commentary, please see Occupy 2.5 at https://Occupy25.com

    This essay will be archived in the WPS News Archives at Amazon.

    References (APA)

    European Commission. (2023). Digital Markets Act and platform competition. https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu

    Electronic Frontier Foundation. (2023). Competition and platform lock-in. https://www.eff.org

    Reuters. (2024). Brands rethink spending on X amid policy changes. https://www.reuters.com

    #anticompetition #creatorEconomy #digitalMarkets #internetPlatforms #marketPower #onlineIncome #Philippines #platformEconomics #smallBusinesses #socialMediaPlatforms #Twitter #XPlatform
  6. Anti-Competition by Design

    By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News

    Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — May 6, 2026

    Competition is what keeps markets honest. When users can move freely, platforms must earn loyalty through better service. On X, that freedom has narrowed. The system increasingly rewards staying inside one ecosystem and quietly punishes anyone who tries to operate outside it.

    This essay explains how that design works and why it harms Filipino creators, journalists, and small businesses.

    How Lock-In Replaces Competition

    Healthy platforms compete for users by improving tools, reliability, and trust. Unhealthy ones compete by making exit costly.

    On X, creators who post links to outside sites often see reduced reach. Accounts that encourage audiences to follow them elsewhere grow more slowly. Over time, users learn an unspoken rule: keep everything inside the platform or accept penalties.

    This is not open competition. It is enforced dependence.

    Why This Matters More in the Philippines

    Filipino creators rarely rely on a single income source. Many combine writing, freelancing, donations, and small online sales. That requires moving audiences between platforms.

    When one platform blocks that movement, it blocks income. A creator may have followers, but no way to convert that attention into support elsewhere. The platform keeps the audience. The creator carries the risk.

    This imbalance is especially damaging in lower-income markets.

    Small Businesses Face the Same Wall

    Local businesses use social media to reach customers, then send them to websites, booking pages, or messaging apps. When those links are suppressed, business slows.

    Owners often do not know why traffic drops. They blame themselves, not the platform. Meanwhile, the platform keeps users scrolling instead of buying.

    Anti-competitive design is most effective when it is quiet.

    Choice Without Real Freedom

    Supporters often argue that users can leave at any time. In theory, that is true. In practice, audiences are locked in.

    Years of work, followers, and reputation are tied to one system. Leaving means starting over. Staying means accepting rules that favor the platform over the user.

    That is not free choice. It is constrained choice.

    Why This Is a Business Failure

    Markets grow when value flows in many directions. Platforms that block movement limit growth for everyone except themselves.

    For Filipino users, this means fewer options, lower income, and higher risk. For the platform, it means declining trust and long-term instability.

    Anti-competition may protect control in the short term, but it weakens the ecosystem over time.

    Looking Ahead

    The next essay will examine how these same design choices affect advertisers and why many brands avoid platforms with unpredictable and restrictive behavior.

    When competition is designed out of the system, users always pay the price.

    For more social commentary, please see Occupy 2.5 at https://Occupy25.com

    This essay will be archived in the WPS News Archives at Amazon.

    References (APA)

    European Commission. (2023). Digital Markets Act and platform competition. https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu

    Electronic Frontier Foundation. (2023). Competition and platform lock-in. https://www.eff.org

    Reuters. (2024). Brands rethink spending on X amid policy changes. https://www.reuters.com

    #anticompetition #creatorEconomy #digitalMarkets #internetPlatforms #marketPower #onlineIncome #Philippines #platformEconomics #smallBusinesses #socialMediaPlatforms #Twitter #XPlatform
  7. Anti-Competition by Design

    By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News

    Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — May 6, 2026

    Competition is what keeps markets honest. When users can move freely, platforms must earn loyalty through better service. On X, that freedom has narrowed. The system increasingly rewards staying inside one ecosystem and quietly punishes anyone who tries to operate outside it.

    This essay explains how that design works and why it harms Filipino creators, journalists, and small businesses.

    How Lock-In Replaces Competition

    Healthy platforms compete for users by improving tools, reliability, and trust. Unhealthy ones compete by making exit costly.

    On X, creators who post links to outside sites often see reduced reach. Accounts that encourage audiences to follow them elsewhere grow more slowly. Over time, users learn an unspoken rule: keep everything inside the platform or accept penalties.

    This is not open competition. It is enforced dependence.

    Why This Matters More in the Philippines

    Filipino creators rarely rely on a single income source. Many combine writing, freelancing, donations, and small online sales. That requires moving audiences between platforms.

    When one platform blocks that movement, it blocks income. A creator may have followers, but no way to convert that attention into support elsewhere. The platform keeps the audience. The creator carries the risk.

    This imbalance is especially damaging in lower-income markets.

    Small Businesses Face the Same Wall

    Local businesses use social media to reach customers, then send them to websites, booking pages, or messaging apps. When those links are suppressed, business slows.

    Owners often do not know why traffic drops. They blame themselves, not the platform. Meanwhile, the platform keeps users scrolling instead of buying.

    Anti-competitive design is most effective when it is quiet.

    Choice Without Real Freedom

    Supporters often argue that users can leave at any time. In theory, that is true. In practice, audiences are locked in.

    Years of work, followers, and reputation are tied to one system. Leaving means starting over. Staying means accepting rules that favor the platform over the user.

    That is not free choice. It is constrained choice.

    Why This Is a Business Failure

    Markets grow when value flows in many directions. Platforms that block movement limit growth for everyone except themselves.

    For Filipino users, this means fewer options, lower income, and higher risk. For the platform, it means declining trust and long-term instability.

    Anti-competition may protect control in the short term, but it weakens the ecosystem over time.

    Looking Ahead

    The next essay will examine how these same design choices affect advertisers and why many brands avoid platforms with unpredictable and restrictive behavior.

    When competition is designed out of the system, users always pay the price.

    For more social commentary, please see Occupy 2.5 at https://Occupy25.com

    This essay will be archived in the WPS News Archives at Amazon.

    References (APA)

    European Commission. (2023). Digital Markets Act and platform competition. https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu

    Electronic Frontier Foundation. (2023). Competition and platform lock-in. https://www.eff.org

    Reuters. (2024). Brands rethink spending on X amid policy changes. https://www.reuters.com

    #anticompetition #creatorEconomy #digitalMarkets #internetPlatforms #marketPower #onlineIncome #Philippines #platformEconomics #smallBusinesses #socialMediaPlatforms #Twitter #XPlatform
  8. Anti-Competition by Design

    By Cliff Potts, CSO, and Editor-in-Chief of WPS News

    Baybay City, Leyte, Philippines — May 6, 2026

    Competition is what keeps markets honest. When users can move freely, platforms must earn loyalty through better service. On X, that freedom has narrowed. The system increasingly rewards staying inside one ecosystem and quietly punishes anyone who tries to operate outside it.

    This essay explains how that design works and why it harms Filipino creators, journalists, and small businesses.

    How Lock-In Replaces Competition

    Healthy platforms compete for users by improving tools, reliability, and trust. Unhealthy ones compete by making exit costly.

    On X, creators who post links to outside sites often see reduced reach. Accounts that encourage audiences to follow them elsewhere grow more slowly. Over time, users learn an unspoken rule: keep everything inside the platform or accept penalties.

    This is not open competition. It is enforced dependence.

    Why This Matters More in the Philippines

    Filipino creators rarely rely on a single income source. Many combine writing, freelancing, donations, and small online sales. That requires moving audiences between platforms.

    When one platform blocks that movement, it blocks income. A creator may have followers, but no way to convert that attention into support elsewhere. The platform keeps the audience. The creator carries the risk.

    This imbalance is especially damaging in lower-income markets.

    Small Businesses Face the Same Wall

    Local businesses use social media to reach customers, then send them to websites, booking pages, or messaging apps. When those links are suppressed, business slows.

    Owners often do not know why traffic drops. They blame themselves, not the platform. Meanwhile, the platform keeps users scrolling instead of buying.

    Anti-competitive design is most effective when it is quiet.

    Choice Without Real Freedom

    Supporters often argue that users can leave at any time. In theory, that is true. In practice, audiences are locked in.

    Years of work, followers, and reputation are tied to one system. Leaving means starting over. Staying means accepting rules that favor the platform over the user.

    That is not free choice. It is constrained choice.

    Why This Is a Business Failure

    Markets grow when value flows in many directions. Platforms that block movement limit growth for everyone except themselves.

    For Filipino users, this means fewer options, lower income, and higher risk. For the platform, it means declining trust and long-term instability.

    Anti-competition may protect control in the short term, but it weakens the ecosystem over time.

    Looking Ahead

    The next essay will examine how these same design choices affect advertisers and why many brands avoid platforms with unpredictable and restrictive behavior.

    When competition is designed out of the system, users always pay the price.

    For more social commentary, please see Occupy 2.5 at https://Occupy25.com

    This essay will be archived in the WPS News Archives at Amazon.

    References (APA)

    European Commission. (2023). Digital Markets Act and platform competition. https://digital-strategy.ec.europa.eu

    Electronic Frontier Foundation. (2023). Competition and platform lock-in. https://www.eff.org

    Reuters. (2024). Brands rethink spending on X amid policy changes. https://www.reuters.com

    #anticompetition #creatorEconomy #digitalMarkets #internetPlatforms #marketPower #onlineIncome #Philippines #platformEconomics #smallBusinesses #socialMediaPlatforms #Twitter #XPlatform
  9. Turn your ideas into income. 💡
    In a world full of AI, your originality is your real asset. Create, build, and monetise what makes you unique.
    www.funfunds.in

  10. Most people are using the internet wrong.

    There are platforms where users get access to rewards, tools, and hidden opportunities.

    The problem? Nobody talks about them.

    #AI #OnlineIncome #DigitalTools
    #CS2Trading #SkinEconomy

  11. You’re Closer to Making Money Online Than You Think

    There are people making money right now doing things that would sound almost insulting if you framed them honestly. Renaming files. Cleaning data. Converting formats. Generating variations. Organizing chaos into something usable.

    cha1nc0der.wordpress.com/2026/

  12. You’re Closer to Making Money Online Than You Think

    There are people making money right now doing things that would sound almost insulting if you framed them honestly. Renaming files. Cleaning data. Converting formats. Generating variations. Organizing chaos into something usable.

    cha1nc0der.wordpress.com/2026/

  13. You’re Closer to Making Money Online Than You Think

    There are people making money right now doing things that would sound almost insulting if you framed them honestly. Renaming files. Cleaning data. Converting formats. Generating variations. Organizing chaos into something usable.

    cha1nc0der.wordpress.com/2026/

  14. You’re Closer to Making Money Online Than You Think

    There are people making money right now doing things that would sound almost insulting if you framed them honestly. Renaming files. Cleaning data. Converting formats. Generating variations. Organizing chaos into something usable.

    cha1nc0der.wordpress.com/2026/

  15. You’re Closer to Making Money Online Than You Think

    There are people making money right now doing things that would sound almost insulting if you framed them honestly. Renaming files. Cleaning data. Converting formats. Generating variations. Organizing chaos into something usable.

    cha1nc0der.wordpress.com/2026/

  16. 💸 Looking to boost your income from home? You’re not alone—over 36% of adults already earn extra money through side hustles

    Discover practical and beginner-friendly ideas to start earning today 👇
    👉 bloggerask.com/best-side-hustl

    From freelancing to passive income ideas, this guide covers everything you need to turn your free time into real money. Start small, stay consistent, and build your extra income stream 💻📈

    #SideHustles #ExtraIncome #MakeMoneyFromHome #OnlineIncome #PassiveIncome

  17. You open your laptop thinking, “There has to be a better way to earn.”
    Bills rising. Dreams waiting. Time slipping.

    What if this year, you finally decide to make money online… the smart way?

    If you’re serious about building online income instead of just scrolling about it, this is for you.

    drchetandhongade.com/finance/m

    #MakeMoney
    #OnlineIncome
    #PassiveIncome
    #SideHustle
    #Freelancing
    #AffiliateMarketing
    #OnlineBusiness
    #DigitalEntrepreneur
    #WorkFromHome
    #FinancialFreedom
    #BloggingTips
    #SmartMoney

  18. 💻 Ever wondered why some freelancers thrive while others struggle?

    You send proposals, juggle clients, work late nights… yet growth feels slow. The truth is, freelancing success isn’t luck. It’s strategy.

    Whether you’re a beginner or an experienced freelancer, this blog helps you work smarter, not harder.

    drchetandhongade.com/business/

    #Freelancing #FreelancerLife #GigEconomy #WorkFromAnywhere
    #RemoteWork #OnlineIncome #DigitalNomad #CareerGrowth
    #ProductivityTips #SelfEmployed #FreelanceSuccess

  19. X doubles creator revenue pool and offers $1M for top Article - but why?: X yesterday expanded its revenue sharing pool, shifted payouts to timeline impressions, weighted Articles more heavily, and launched a $1M prize for US creators. ppc.land/x-doubles-creator-rev #CreatorEconomy #RevenueSharing #ContentCreation #OnlineIncome #DigitalCreators

  20. X doubles creator revenue pool and offers $1M for top Article - but why?: X yesterday expanded its revenue sharing pool, shifted payouts to timeline impressions, weighted Articles more heavily, and launched a $1M prize for US creators. ppc.land/x-doubles-creator-rev #CreatorEconomy #RevenueSharing #ContentCreation #OnlineIncome #DigitalCreators

  21. X doubles creator revenue pool and offers $1M for top Article - but why?: X yesterday expanded its revenue sharing pool, shifted payouts to timeline impressions, weighted Articles more heavily, and launched a $1M prize for US creators. ppc.land/x-doubles-creator-rev #CreatorEconomy #RevenueSharing #ContentCreation #OnlineIncome #DigitalCreators

  22. 🎬 Want to earn money just by watching videos?

    LuckyWatch is a platform that pays you for:
    ✔️ Watching short videos
    ✔️ Completing simple tasks
    ✔️ Staying active

    No skills, no investment — just watch and earn.

    Start here:
    👉 LuckyWatch

    Link :-

    luckywatch.pro/u/0npnt

    #watchandearn #sidehustle #onlineincome #freemoney

  23. Start Your Dropshipping Journey Today

    Want to earn digital income in today’s online world? Learn future-ready skills and discover how dropshipping can help you build a sustainable online business with low investment and smart strategies. Start preparing for the future today.

    #FutureReadySkills #DigitalIncome #DropshippingBusiness #OnlineIncome #WorkFromAnywhere #EcommerceLife #LearnOnline #PassiveIncome #DigitalSkills #OnlineBusiness

  24. Start Your Dropshipping Journey Today

    Want to earn digital income in today’s online world? Learn future-ready skills and discover how dropshipping can help you build a sustainable online business with low investment and smart strategies. Start preparing for the future today.

    #FutureReadySkills #DigitalIncome #DropshippingBusiness #OnlineIncome #WorkFromAnywhere #EcommerceLife #LearnOnline #PassiveIncome #DigitalSkills #OnlineBusiness

  25. Start Your Dropshipping Journey Today

    Want to earn digital income in today’s online world? Learn future-ready skills and discover how dropshipping can help you build a sustainable online business with low investment and smart strategies. Start preparing for the future today.

    #FutureReadySkills #DigitalIncome #DropshippingBusiness #OnlineIncome #WorkFromAnywhere #EcommerceLife #LearnOnline #PassiveIncome #DigitalSkills #OnlineBusiness

  26. Build Your Online Store with Dropshipping – Join Today

    Start your online business journey with our step-by-step Complete Dropshipping Course. Learn everything from product research and store setup to marketing, order management, and scaling your business — even if you’re a beginner.

    #DropshippingCourse #LearnDropshipping #EcommerceBusiness #OnlineIncome #DigitalEntrepreneur #WorkFromHome

  27. Master Dropshipping – Enroll Now

    Start your online business journey with our step-by-step Complete Dropshipping Course. Learn everything from product research and store setup to marketing, order management, and scaling your business — even if you’re a beginner.

    #DropshippingCourse #LearnDropshipping #EcommerceBusiness #OnlineIncome #DigitalEntrepreneur #WorkFromHome

  28. 1. How much did you earn online for the first time?
    2. In your opinion, what skill do you think will earn you the most income in 2025?
    3. Do you do freelancing—on what platform?
    #OnlineIncome
    #EarnMoney
    aface1.com

  29. 🌟 Việc làm từ xa dễ dàng — Kiếm tiền bằng việc quay và đăng clip ngắn (Không cần kinh nghiệm)!
    Tạo clip phong cách fanpage, thêm phụ đề tự động, đăng lên Instagram. Lương $1/1,000 lượt xem, có thưởng giới thiệu. Toàn cầu, hỗ trợ Tiếng Anh/Hindi. Chỉ cần điện thoại và chỉnh sửa cơ bản.
    👉 Inbox số WhatsApp: +91 8881740072 để biết thêm chi tiết!
    #việc_làm_từ_xa #kiếm_tiền_trên_mạng #Instagram #không_cần_kinh_nghiệm #RemoteWork #OnlineIncome #Freelance #SideHustle

    reddit.com/r/S

  30. Chào các bạn! Có side hustle mới nào hôm nay? Tôi từng freelance copywriter 1 năm rồi, giờ là chủ agent copywriting. Mình tạo newsletter gratis 'INSIDER HUSTLERS' dạy kỹ năng copy & outreach giúp bạn kiếm $1k đầu tay online. Đ constat miễn phí tại insiderhustlers.beehiiv.com. #sidehustle #copywriting #onlineincome #freelancer #startup

    (499 ký tự)

    reddit.com/r/SideProject/comme

  31. **Nhémie thêm cả tháng với việc thu thập hoa serai trực tuyến!** 🎉
    Thành ra chỉ chi italiana sáng 5 phút يوميًا để thu thập-seat từ các trang web sweepstake (lần $1entry). Tập hợp nhiều site/ngày cháuSyn sẽ có $600+/tháng. Hướng dẫn chi tiết je смы в RedditProfile của người chia sẻ. #SideHustle #Freemoney #OnlineIncome #Vietnamese #MakeMoneyOnline

    reddit.com/r/SideProject/comme