Sixty60 Out of 6 items with fancy advertising and backup items I guarantee its been ‘out of stock’ since it was listed it’s a con to make money from banking

Sixty60 Out of 6 items with fancy advertising and backup items I guarantee its been ‘out of stock’ since it was listed it’s a con to make money from banking

WhatsApp Us: BROWSEARCH & Feedonomy
ChatFPC (Free-Per-Click)
Feedonomy

Sixty60 @Sixty60 @sixty60 #sixty60 Checkers #CheckersSouthAfrica @Facebook . @Twitter and truth @pepkorgroup #pepkor #pepkorgroup @PepkorGroup Sixty and Me @sixty60 PEP PEP FACEBOOK PAGE. Checkers Never any stock! I need underwear. I placed 2 orders just today. How can 12 products advertised in stock all be out of stock? I want my money back and my damaged items replaced. See you AT 4th beach Clifton hope fully Christo will lend me some underwear, on route…. 60 This is not f….ing acceptable. I have had enough now. Occasionally, something listed as in stock is not. This wasn’t the case when I ordered twice in one morning. I have no underwear here on vacation, so I have to wait until 12 pm. I ordered 3 types of underwear: large, extra large, and something else. I had to add backup products. I have to add other things to get the value up with your huge bloody Friday speckle specials. I really don’t care if I save R50.00. That is not why I am buying. Then I got nothing to wear I am here for 1.5 days. I have spent the entire day with 3 orders with backups of underwear. This means not only one item with the backup is 2 items but six items. There are huge discounts everywhere. I don’t care. I want to know what is in stock. You have just done it too many times. I will not let it go. I want Christo Wiese contact number. Otherwise, I will go to one of his 2 Clifton beach houses and I will get underwear from him. I am giving you 1 hour to deliver underwear to 9 Glen beach, Camps Bay. You will see my location. I am going to Christ if I get arrested. I will pay the online newspapers and give them the scoop of me going to get my underwear. Bring your camera to 4th beach Clifton. Get the scoop going to @ChrisoWieso, the owner of 60 sixty, at his 2 beach houses. Meet me at 4th beach. You will get the Black Friday scoop of the decade getting underwear from @ChristoWieso. Excuse the spelling. 4th beach Clifton at 12:15 pm today Monday 24 November 2025 @sixty60. Underwear Large you can’t have 6 items all out of stock I even emailed and asked please cancel order if once again everything is out of stock and still you debit my account for 20 times the amount you charged how dare you debit my account when you don’t even have stock the fact you credit my account with checkers now I know why you had to get a banking license decide if you a bank don’t pretend to be a retailer this no stock is planned you make more money from interest so you program your system to hide no stock stickers so you can charge millions of shoppers it makes no differenCE you credit checkers bank my bank account with checkers let me guess how many millions you made just this weekend from fake not in stock but you have to make the item seem to be in stock otherwise your fake fund hour illegal banking system would notwork in fact more items are not in stock than get sold how much did you credit just today you made millions don’t try claim your fantastic system can make so many mistakes one order 12 items not in stock did you see the trouble you went to and the low prices I bet you didn’t even sell one packet of underwear damn financial crooks

I know of at least three ad networks that offer genuine FPC, meaning the advertiser does not pay for clicks. Examples: SellFPC.com, Feedonomy.com and SearchFPC.com. SearchFPC (Free-Per-Click) formerly Non PPC is the leading FPC Advertising Network. https://nonppc.com  or  https://feedonomy.com

I read an AI-generated explanation of PPC advertising in Google’s browser and confirmed that FPPC cannot exist because PPC’s entire business model is pay-per-click. The only way FPPC (Free-Pay-Per-Click) could exist is if a network or company offers a promotional or short-term special offer. Otherwise, it doesn’t make sense. PPC is based on paying per click, so the concept of Free-Pay-Per-Click is contradictory. I agree with the AI’s claim that there is no such thing as Free PPC, as PPC is known as pay-per-click. Google Ads controls well over 80% of the market, but PPC is not exclusive to Google; Microsoft (formerly Bing) also uses PPC, albeit with a smaller market share. Therefore, FPPC cannot exist as a standard model; it can only be a temporary promotion. However, Free-Per-Click (FPC) is a different matter. I know of at least three ad networks that offer genuine FPC, meaning the advertiser does not pay for clicks. This is not a short-term marketing gimmick. If a company claims to offer FPC as their business model and it is not a temporary promotion, then it is legitimate. I have contacted these networks, and two of them have confirmed in writing that their business model is FPC. In summary, while FPPC cannot exist beyond short-term promotions, FPC is a genuine model, and I know of at least three networks that offer it. I agree with the AI’s claim that there is no such thing as (FPPC) Free PPC, as PPC is known. However, I disagree with the AI’s claim that FPC does not exist. I know of at least three ad networks that offer genuine FPC, meaning the advertiser does not pay for clicks. Examples: SellFPC.com, Feedonomy.com, SearchFPC.com SearchFPC (Free-Per-Click) formerly Non PPC is the leading FPC Advertising Network. https://nonppc.com or https://feedonomy.com

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Interconnected Yet Independent:
Each private ad network could have its own branding, focus, or niche (e.g., a network for tech products, local services, or sustainable goods). However, because they’re part of the federation, an ad placed in one network gets distributed across all connected networks. This creates a shared ecosystem that’s much bigger than the sum of its parts.

Federation of Ad Networks: The Concept

What you’re describing is essentially creating a decentralized, federated ecosystem for advertising. Just like federated social media (think Mastodon in the Fediverse), individual businesses, organizations, or even regions could set up their own ad networks under your framework. Here’s how it could work:

  1. Shared Infrastructure with Local Independence:
    Each company, individual, or organization can create its own private ad network at their own cost. They follow the same Terms and Conditions (T&Cs) to ensure compatibility across the federation. While they manage their local network, all ads, articles, or directory listings from the broader system can also flow into their network, and vice versa. Result: The federation gets bigger with each new network added, exponentially increasing reach and distribution.
  2. Interconnected Yet Independent:
    Each private ad network could have its own branding, focus, or niche (e.g., a network for tech products, local services, or sustainable goods). However, because they’re part of the federation, an ad placed in one network gets distributed across all connected networks. This creates a shared ecosystem that’s much bigger than the sum of its parts.
  3. Built-In Scale:
    Instead of one centralized platform (like Google Ads), you’d have a system where anyone can set up their own ad network with the permission of no less than 75% of shareholders vote, using your tools and principles. This could lead to:
    • Hundreds or thousands of interconnected ad networks.
    • A global marketplace of ads and content, where reach is automatically amplified.
  4. Power to the Advertisers:
    Advertisers who participate in this system get their ads distributed far beyond the original network they used—without paying extra. For example:
    • Someone posts an ad on Network A (e.g., “Feedonomy”).
    • That ad is automatically shared across Network B (“Browsearch”) and Network C (a private network created by a local advertiser).
    • The more networks that join the federation, the wider the reach—essentially turning the federation into a massive ad distribution system.
  5. Electrifying Idea:
    By telling advertisers, “Your ads are now being distributed on two (or more) new platforms, at no extra cost,” it creates excitement and a sense of growing value. It’s not just an ad network anymore—it’s a movement.

Why It Could Work Better Than Social Media

Unlike social media, where content is tied to user-generated posts and engagement, your system focuses purely on commerce and advertising. This is simpler, clearer, and potentially more scalable because:

  • Businesses and advertisers already want distribution; you’re just giving them a new, federated way to achieve it.
  • There’s less dependency on the kind of “social interaction” that makes social media complex and harder to manage at scale.

Key Benefits of This Model

  1. Exponential Growth:
    Each new network adds value to the entire system. A single advertiser on Network D could now see their ad distributed across all networks, multiplying visibility without multiplying cost. Similarly, each new network benefits from ads already placed in the system.
  2. Decentralized yet Unified:
    Just like federated social media, each network operates independently but adheres to the same principles (e.g., T&Cs, shared protocols, equity models). This avoids the pitfalls of centralization while still enabling a cohesive experience.
  3. Scalable for Any Size:
    A large company could build their own private ad network, while a small local business could just plug into an existing network and still benefit from the federation.
  4. Built-In Redundancy:
    If one network struggles or fails, the others keep functioning. This resiliency makes the system far more robust than a single, centralized platform.
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What Are Search FPC Product Ads?


Search FPC (Free-Per-Click) Product Ads are Free listings that let businesses showcase products with an image, title, and description. Unlike Pay-Per-Click (PPC), there are no costs per click — ads stay visible without ongoing payments. 

Shoppers who click an ad are sent directly to the seller’s website or marketplace (e.g., eBay, Etsy, or their own store) to complete the purchase. Advertisers can link both their own site and marketplace listings to maximize reach. 

Because Search FPC is part of a federated network, ads may also appear across partner platforms at no extra cost.