<p>In the past I have come across websites advertising opportunities to sell them your literary essays/papers. Some even offer up to 50$ per paper and the utilization seems innocent enough.</p>
<p>I, myself am not particularly familiar with these types of exchanges so if anyone has any prior experience or moral obligations that they would like to share, then please do so! I have tons of old literary analyses that will not do me any good so I figured I might as well attempt to offset future testing costs!</p>
<p>Any websites? :)</p>
<p>um 100% sure that’s illegal lol</p>
<p>It is not illegal, but it is ethically dubious. Sites like this pretend to sell essays as learning aids, but the simple truth is that students buy them to cheat, and that is what the sites intend for them to do. I encourage you not to get involved.</p>
<p>Is tht really what they do? This site had them published to use as a “learning aid…”</p>
<p>look on the next tab, I just hacked your screen and wrote “elbillug” backwards</p>
<p>@foolish the sad thing is i thought you were serious @ first and just about typed out “WHAT. HOW. DO YOU KNOW RSTEIN3 IN PERSON OR SOMETHING.” before i googled elbillug to see if it was a new type of virus or some crap.</p>
<h1>thesadlyfofanantisocialteen</h1>
<p>Don’t bother. Actual improvement in writing style is brought about by a combination of practice and revision of quality, not reading a random person’s literary analysis (most likely on works already greatly written about already). Most students won’t have access to the money or the ability to purchase an essay for a steep minimum price as well.</p>
<p>Besides, I believe you’d be hard-pressed to successfully make adequate money off of essays. Spend that effort doing something else; that site takes 50% of what you make, anyway.</p>