Analystnew-life-style

This is a version of an old scam, common on sites like Ebay etc: Coins, precious metal ingots etc, that of course aren’t real and not worth nearly as much as they claim. This site also have a Mystery box.

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Heavenly-happy-collection

Uses stolen videos and images, and the info on the website does not belong to them (The phone number belongs to London School of Economics and Political Science and the e-mail address seems to belong to a fashion company)

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Computer tower with red LED fans

This one is a bit “trickier”, here two of the comments (so far), claim that their “friend” bought the Mystery Box™ and they show of what their “friend” got.But even if we would believe that two of the commenters share the same friend, and that…

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Laptop, showing dials and temperature

This is a good example of how lazy these scammers are (and how they apparently DGAF), they simply take a random image (usually from a review) without caring for the context. There have been several examples of this, where the image comes from a negative…

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Prospect-happy-collection

This site uses stolen images and videos, both in the ads, in the (fake) comments on Facebook, and in the “Store”. The contact info on the site is “fake” (or rather: it doesn’t belong to them!): The contact e-mail listed in the footer doesn’t belong…

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Productfor-life-collection

The contact e-mail listed in the footer doesn’t seem to belong to the site at all (If you go to nova.com you get to a webpage of a fashion company), and the phone number belongs to London School of Economics.

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Chance-happy-collection

AKA “Household-happy.site” and “roundtablefor-life” / “roundtablefor” (because they can’t keep the name straight between the Facebook page/ad, the domain name, and site title/name of the site in the about section). The contact e-mail listed in the footer doesn’t seem to belong to the site at…

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