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November 27, 2007 1:19 PM PST

Today in freaky start-ups: RentYourSoul.com

by Emily Shurr
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Pierre Ayotte, noted in a press release to be a "friendly upcoming Internet opportunist"--i.e. not The Devil Himself, just to be clear--would like to rent your soul for 10 bucks a week.

It's a new twist on an old nonprofit business model. He's gambling that the soul-leasing business will earn enough to keep him afloat from the charities that pay weekly to advertise on his site, RentYourSoul.com.

Ayotte swears he's not working for Beelzebub. He'll pay you $10--via PayPal, check, or bank note--and also donate $10 to the charity of your choice, selected from the nonprofits posting to RentYourSoul.

If you've ever been tempted to trade your soul for fame, fortune, or other significant gains, you're in good company: Homer and Bart Simpson, Dr. Faustus, Charlie Daniels' violin-wielding "Johnny," and any number of blues players have risked perdition with the Prince of Darkness. One CNET News.com staffer claims to have sold her soul in exchange for her almost supernatural Guitar Hero skillz.

Instead of skirting the fiery pit of eternal damnation, why not simply lease your soul for a good cause? It only takes a few minutes to post a photo of yourself, and if Ayotte displays it on the home page, you're soul-free for a week and 10 dollars richer afterward. No, you can't have hordes of dancing girls and wealth beyond your wildest dreams in exchange. But you can have the satisfaction of a deed well done for the good of others.

What's the risk? It's an asset almost all of us possess, and chances are, you're not using yours anyway.

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What's the catch?
by bhushan bhaagii November 27, 2007 9:00 PM PST
Sounds too good to be true. What's the catch?
I haven't logged on to the website, so far.
For that matter, don't know if in these times
of virtual reality and second life we have a soul at all.
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only 20 every week
by No Man November 28, 2007 5:18 AM PST
Not everyone gets $10. The site does a random drawing and the first 20 they pick get the money for that week. That way the site's expenses never exceed their advertising income, which can apparently only support $200 in giveaways at the moment. If it catches on and they get more advertisers, I could see them increasing that number. Not bad, but not as good as CNET made it sound.
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Need Souls
by PierreAyotte January 2, 2008 6:02 PM PST
Hello,

I'm Pierre, from RentYourSoul.
Doing a quick follow-up: not enough Souls for this month... Readers, if you want 10$ and a link to your favorite charity, send your Soul/Picture. And if you've never seen a site that actually gives money away for free, then this is the first one ;)

Cheers
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