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)

Read more

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…

Read more

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…

Read more

Vertexfor-life-collection

The name for this scam store is a good example of a nonsense, randomly generated, name.“Vertex for life” simply makes no sense, especially for a store (might be good for a 3D artist ;D ).

Read more

Ecomercially peace

This site lacks proper business information etc. It also uses stolen images and videos (both on the site and in the ads). One of the stolen videos depicts a child (NOT shown in the screenshot), which is a big issue (posting videos/images of a child…

Read more

Atonlove

Random name, uses stolen images, no company information, and (seemingly) incorrect contact e-mail (for IP violations, which thy are experts in… The same address appears on multiple sites, with a similar “profile”)

Read more

Back to top