Modern Slavery Statement for qwqxe.com
Published: April 01, 2025
At qwqxe.com, I’m committed to running https://qwqxe.com/ ethically, rejecting modern slavery, forced labor, or trafficking in every form. Launched in 2024 from Nigeria, this solo-run site helps you explore jobs abroad, scholarships, career growth, and travel—and I’m determined to do it right, from content to operations.
I’m based in Nigeria, an amazing center where I started qwqxe.com to share opportunities with a global audience. As a one-person team, I write most of the content—guides on job hunting Aboard, Fully funded scholarship opportunities in the U.S., UK, Australia, Germany and other countries, career guides for professionals, And How to Travel/relocate Abroad. To keep things funded, I use Google AdSense, pairing ads with the info you need. Occasionally, I bring in Nigerian freelancers to add depth, but it’s a tight, transparent setup focused on quality and fairness.
Content creation’s my core, and I keep it clean. I write the bulk myself, drawing from research and personal insight. When I hire freelancers—always locals in Nigeria—I work with them directly, no shady middlemen. They’re paid fairly via bank transfer, with rates that respect their skills and time. We agree on terms upfront, ensuring they’re free professionals, not exploited workers. It’s a small pipeline, but I’m meticulous about keeping it ethical, from start to finish.
Due diligence is how I make sure of that. Before hiring, I verify each freelancer’s identity and setup—simple chats confirm they’re legit and working willingly. I stay in touch throughout, checking they’re treated right, with no crazy deadlines or unpaid gigs. Our agreements ban forced labor explicitly, and they can email me at shockleymark25@gmail.com with any issues—anonymous or not. It’s a hands-on approach that keeps exploitation out of my process.
Risks? They’re minimal but real. Nigeria’s freelance market can tempt some to cut corners, and low-cost content farms are a global issue. I steer clear of those, sticking to direct hires I can trust. I review my practices regularly—payments, workloads, feedback—to catch any slip-ups. My scale’s small, so I control it tightly, ensuring no one’s squeezed unfairly. Education’s key too; I stay sharp on slavery signs, ready to act if something’s off.
This commitment’s ongoing. If I spot a problem—say, a freelancer’s under pressure I didn’t see—I’ll fix it fast, no excuses. From Nigeria, I’m building qwqxe.com to be a force for good, not just a site. That means ethical content creation, every time, supporting your dreams without compromising anyone’s rights.
Questions or concerns? Reach me at shockleymark25@gmail.com. I review this statement yearly, updating it as we grow. For now, it’s me, my freelancers, and a promise: no slavery, no shortcuts—just a site that’s fair, from Nigeria to you.