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He worked hard to get accepted there, is a good student and has even started a youth mentoring non-profit group.
But Alexander is in a bind. After co-signer requirements went up in the private loan industry because of the credit crisis -- he can't get the rest of the loans he needs to finish college.
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So here was one back-up plan -- to build a Web site called "help Marc Alexander go to college" with hopes that family, friends, maybe even strangers will spare him some change.
Cyber-begging is nothing new. The first widely publicized case was in 2002 when Karyn Bosnak, a twenty-something woman from New York started the Web site "savekaryn.com." She wanted to raise $20,000 to pay off her credit card debts -- and guess what? She did.
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Web sites have even cropped up to help the desperate-for-money peeps promote their cause.
Alexander is just a 23-year-old guy trying to finish his degree. It's not quite the same as asking strangers to help drag you out of a mountain of debt from spending too much on shoes.
But in a bad economy, what's the etiquette for cyber-help?
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