Tuesday, 17 April 2018

Tiger Woods does NOT use EnduraFlex - Yet Another Fake ESPN Site EXPOSED

This is more BS from EnduraFlex. It pretends to be the ESPN site AGAIN (where are the Disney lawyers when you need them?) It claims that Tiger Woods admitted to using EnduraFlex (citation needed). It then continues as a slight rehash of the old Sidney Crosby Alpha Force Testo fake news story, except with "NHL" search-and-replaced by "PGA", "Sidney Crosby" search-and-replaced by "Tiger Woods", "Alpha Force Testo" search-and-replaced by "Enduraflex Performance", and a few other minor edits. Therefore, the red flags are the same as that scam: the fake comments, the "free" trial offer, the fake "results", and the fact that the REAL ESPN site would never shill a supplement like this. The "free" trial ordering page being linked to by the fake news site appears to be a "missing link" between EnduraFlex and Alpha Force Testo (the "cdesign proponentsists" of FakeESPN-related muscle supplements - it would be even more obvious if it said "AlphEnduraFlexesto" somewhere), making the presentation as a whole (AdSense ad + fake news site + ordering page) even MORE suspicious-looking. The scammers appear to have switched back to that fancy iframe trick, but don't be fooled; the "checkout" subdomain is still there, and is still vulnerable to the Voluumdata XSS Exploit. Once again, stay away from EnduraFlex, and don't believe everything you read on the Internet.

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