Azon Affiliates Warning; First 96 Hours of a Stay at Home SHTF Event Limit 50 PLR

Published: Sat, 02/24/24


If you're an Amazon Associate, make sure you scroll down to read my quick note because it appears as if they're clamping down on anyone using AI starting March 1st. I'll discuss it at the bottom of today's email. 

Today I did the other survival report - this time on the first 96 hours in a stay at home SHTF event, not bugging out. So if you bought the other one, you'll want this one, too - but they're stand alone. 

New Limit 50 PLR: First 96 Hours of a Stay at Home SHTF Event

My latest limited to 50 buyers PLR is called First 96 Hours of a Stay at Home SHTF Event. Previously I did this same topic, but for bugging out. In most survival scenarios, people are going to be staying home, so this one focuses on what to do in three locations - urban, suburban, and rural home STFH events in the first 96 hours. As we saw during 2020, the initial phase was pure chaos and panic, with stores crammed full of people fighting over supplies. There are different plans for individual survival scenarios, so this report helps preppers have a systematic approach to these events. 

This 6+ page, 3,024-word PLR covers the following:

- Urban Living Involves Unique Challenges
- Suburban Families Will Have Different Tools at Their Disposal
- Rural Homes Have It Easier, But Still Face Specific Problems

** This PLR comes in both Word and TXT formats

Free Graphic

I've included a PNG file that you can use in your marketing.

Be one of only 50 people to own it here:
https://www.plrlaunch.com/first-96-hours-of-a-stay-at-home-shtf-event-limit-50-plr

Quick Note for Amazon Associates

If you're in the Amazon affiliate program, whether it's in America or the EU, you probably got a notice (3rd bulletpoint) yesterday but you may or may not closely read the changes taking place. 

This is what they said: "Revised the language in Section 5 of the Participation Requirements to clarify that Program Content and Special Links should not be used in connection with generative AI."

Some are saying this is simply about the use of software or devices that create and plug in your links for you and others (me included) say it's about any AI content, because they're not going to know if you created it with AI and plugged the link in yourself or had a plugin do it for you. 

When I went searching for more info on it, I found some posts on social media platforms talking about how bad this is going be because we already know those AI checkers are NOT good. I have sat down and written from scratch and it tells me it's AI. Likewise, I've used AI and had it tell me it's not.

So those are nothing more than a scam. A family member who knows nothing about AI at all is in her 40s getting her upper degree and her professor said her work failed an AI check. She wasn't using it at ALL so now she has to somehow prove she didn't do it! How do you prove yourself innocent?

You can bet there are going to be accounts closed because some wonky AI checker says, "Yep! It's AI content" even if it isn't. And this also means you may want to fix content you've already published that's linking to Amazon products.

What I would do if this were me:

1. Double check that any content you have pointing to Amazon is not AI created - and know this: if you're buying PLR, only a SMALL handful of vendors will be honest - and others have teeny tiny disclaimers. Some like me will be very clear when and if anything is AI. An AI checker is NOT going to tell you whether or not something's AI. And vendors can't be trusted inherently, so buy from people you know and trust. 

2. If you DO have AI content where you're promoting something to Amazon, change the links to point elsewhere. There are TONS of affiliate platforms you can earn from - on Share-a-Sale, Commission Junction, ClickBank, etc. 

3. Stop using AI for Amazon promos, period. All I would use it for regarding Amazon is basic questions like: "What kind of products would make a good list review for someone suffering from chronic knee pain?" Or, "Give me a list of questions buyers often want to know before purchasing a [product]." Then I'd just write from scratch - not use those questions as is, but as a guide for what I want to cover. 

What's odd to me is they seem to have readily accepted AI into the self publishing fiction world, but they're starting to crack down on AI affiliate content and this could be because so many are using it without oversight when recommending products that could even harm the reader - unlike fiction, which is all make believe. 

So just a heads up to start digging into this. There isn't more info on it yet, but when I find anything else out, I'll let you know. 

Tiff ;)
 


PO Box 373, Kennedale, Texas 76060


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