Music venue shop

Has anyone done the Sassie MSC shop where you have to record an hour of music? Although the assignment is ostensibly for microphone quality, some of the questions they're asking and the nature of the locations (all very small pubs that would never host a touring or even major local act) make me wonder if this isn't actually a songwriting organization looking to see if someone is performing their songs without paying royalties. That job has traditionally been done by people making a lot more than $15.

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PS This should have been posted in the general Mystery Shopping Discussion. Sorry!
I looked at it, saw the fee & length of visit required and didn't even look further.
I looked at the web page of the one location near me. Each night was a special theme. I think one was 'Tattoos' and another was 'adult toys'. Yeah like I would blend in with that crowd!
I looked at the locations near me and none of them had such events listed on their website. I find the job to be odd. Not enough money to entertain this.
Read the shop description. Something seems off about this. The two places in my area are a brewery and a medium-sized bar and grille by the beach which has a very tiny stage. I can't see why on earth they'd hire a MSC to check audio quality at their places. And why the need to photograph all maximum occupancy signs? I'm.not sure exactly what they're after, but audio quality doesn't sound like it.

I don't think there are any Russians / And there ain't no Yanks
Just corporate criminals\ / Playin' with tanks
The one in my area is a winery with events such as, "music bingo," and "wine and chocolate pairings," etc..There are no live music events. I guess that is why the job is just sitting on the board.
Up to $25 here with $30 expenses. One shop in my vicinity is available. Still passing on it.

I don't think there are any Russians / And there ain't no Yanks
Just corporate criminals\ / Playin' with tanks
The description made me think it was testing phone audio recording software and hardware since quite a lot of people record live music with phones nowadays. Maybe tech wants to capitalize on that feature for that demographic? However, checking for music industry licensing violations sounds probably more like it. I wonder if there is a database that can be checked to see if a place has paid their ASCAP fees although that really doesn’t matter.
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