Pleasit

This ad uses an image stolen from a news article about Amazon returns, and liquidation sales. The article can be found here: https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/marketplace-amazon-returns-1.5753714 (PLEASE NOTE that the article, the news site/corp., and the people mentioned within is NOT linked to the scam site, the scammers…

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Avalanew-life-collection

Uses multiple names, and the domain and website name (playnew-life) doesn’t match the Facebook page name. Also uses the name “droidnew” in the About Us secction. Uses stolen images and videos. The social media links are just placeholders, and the contact e-mail is unrelated to…

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Orala

The Facebook page, that runs the ad, uses the name “Orala”, but the website uses the domain “oralacky”. The e-mail address given for contact/support looks like either a personal e-mail address (using a first & last name plus a number), or a randomly generated name,…

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Equinox-Nature-Collection

This site uses stolen images and videos in both their ads and on their site. There is no business information, and the customer support contact information is a e-mail with a unrelated domain (with no website connected). The site is run by “Funpinpin”, which is…

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Striking-happy-collection

Several stolen images (the same set that tends to be used on these sites) Missing information (complete pages): Contact/Business details, About section, etc. The same oversized, and “overly clear”, images for the payment process. The links to social media (Instagram, Facebook etc) are just placeholders…

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