I was printing a couple of coupons this morning in case I get a chance to stop by the store today. I noticed a new one on Coupons.com:
-$.50/1 Lawry’s Seasoned Salt, Galic Salt or any size Garlic Powder
I am actually glad I ran over to Coupons.com as I had an issue printing a bricks coupon this morning. Once I tried to print on coupons.com, they told me I needed to reinstall the coupon printer. I did it and was able to go back and print the bricks coupon 🙂 Just a heads up in case you guys run into this issue…maybe they have done some upgrades??
The coupon fairy has struck!! I just made a new recipe and used up all my garlic powder!!
You know I have not been able to print coupons from SmartSource in a few months. An error keeps coming up. it states that access has been disabled. I have checked to make sure that everything on my end is correct; such as the updated version of Java and in Mozilla Firefox I have enabled the Java. I contacted them with the error message and the “code” it asked me to provide and I have yet to hear how to fix this problem……I have emailed them several times about this problem. Anyone else have this happen to them and have you been able to resolve the problem? Any suggestions would be GREATLY appreciated!! 🙂
I also saw a 1.50/2 Kelloggs froot loops, corn pops and a-jacks. Great for the $5 rebate if they are BOGO next week.
Wow, I just did a system restore on my computer. I thought I had a problem with my printer. Now I realize it was the website. Same problem here. Now I will try again.
I did a search and found the following info on Coupons.com They change your computer’s registry keys and will cut you off if you copy coupons. Check it out. They assign ID numbers to your coupons and if you overprint, you are locked out.
I recently examined software from Coupons.com. At first glance their approach seems quite handy. Who could oppose free coupons? But a deeper look reveals troubling behaviors I can’t endorse. This piece summarizes my key concerns:
Installing with deceptive filenames and registry entries that hinder users’ efforts to fully remove Coupons’ software. Details.
Failing to remove all Coupons.com components upon a user’s specific request. Details.
Assigning each user an ID number, and placing this ID onto each printed coupon, without any meaningful disclosure. Details.
Allowing third-party web sites to retrieve users’ ID numbers, in violation of Coupons.com’s privacy policy. Details.
Allowing any person to check whether a given user has printed a given coupon, in violation of Coupons.com’s privacy policy. Details.
Here is where this info is located
http://www.benedelman.org/news/082807-1.html