Saturday 19 September 2020

Keanu Reeves did NOT Create Canadian Extracts Hemp Oil - Fake People Magazine Site EXPOSED

This is a fake People Magazine website, created to shill some scammy hemp oil. It claims that Keanu Reeves created it, which is obvious BS. The red flags are obvious - the un-People-Magazine-like URL, the fake comments section, the free trial offer, and the fact that the REAL People Magazine would not shill a hemp oil like this. This is being advertised on legitimate news sites using a Google AdSense ad that links to a "tabloid cloaking" page, hosted on a Shopify site. Google and Shopify are doing NOTHING about this, unlike Netlify and GitHub, which routinely take down the YuanPay fake news scam sites I report to them. The link trail:

james-crom-shop.myshopify(.)com/blogs/news/ten-simple-steps-to-maintaining-health

(embeds)

top.finepages(.)best/72ee4112-df96-4e25-8478-2f7f133132f8

(redirects to)

static.ezlanderz(.)com/o/202/1033/index.html


Stay away from Canadian Extracts Hemp Oil, and as always, don't believe everything you read on the Internet.

Justin Trudeau Has NOTHING To Do With Bitcoin UP - Fake Toronto Star Website EXPOSED

This is an obviously fake Toronto Star website, created to shill a scammy binary options platform. You can tell it's fake by the several common red flags: it uses a variant of the "Entertainment Today" layout instead of the real Toronto Star layout, the domain is a .eu domain (Canada is NOT an European country), the comments are fake and don't work, all the links go to the same spam page, and no real news site would shill a binary options platform like this. They forgot to mention the name of the platform (whoops), but clicking on any of the images links to something called "Bitcoin UP", which is an obvious scam. Stay away from Bitcoin UP, and don't believe everything you read on the Internet.