Raise your hands if you’ve experienced this situation before:
You’re surfing the web, and then you come across one of those fun free sites. It grabs your attention so well that you can’t help but investigate it. So you click on the link. Lo and behold, the fearsome “Registration Site” pops up! The weapons blocking your way are the familiar FIRST NAME column, LAST NAME column, ADDRESS column, E-MAIL column, HAIR COLOR column, FAVORITE COLOR column, FAVORITE FOOD column, WHAT DID YOU DO LAST FRIDAY AND THE DAY BEFORE column and so on. You go through with it as if each keyboard press instills in you an energy that could wipe out the Bubonic Plague like a legion of angels can do from Heaven. However, once you click on the link, you’re whisked away to yet another window asking you to fill out a survey about the various colors of bug juice (that means “blood”) and which ones are the most disgusting, not to mention the survey promises that once you’re done, you can enter this supposedly “free” site with ease and never have to fill out another freakin’ column or row of white space about something as meaningless as the size shoe you wear!
Ever experience that? Be honest. Raise your hand.
It’s annoying, terrifying, aggravating, frustrating. Free sites are just not FREE. But this writer says NAY. “We Will Fight for Freedom!” Unfortunately, not every site is like direct.tv where ease of convenience and security is prioritized.
Enter the clever little web site called “Bug Me Not” (bugmenot.com), and you’ll breathe a sigh of relief as you’ll find that the domain harnesses all collected data from whatever free site you can possibly find to bypass each and every column of registration with ease and time efficiency. Just type the URL you want to access on “Bug Me Not’s” front page, click it, and it’ll list a number of user names and passwords with their accuracy percentages. A fun, convenient way to circumvent “free”registration. Enjoy!