Revealing the YouTube Rewards App Moneymaking Scam
Online scammers marketed a deceptive scheme in the summer of 2025, claiming a YouTube Rewards program or app could earn users money.
Online scammers marketed a deceptive scheme in the summer of 2025, claiming a YouTube Rewards program or app could earn users money.
Scammers presented consumers with misleading marketing for a product named My Mobile Machine, leading to searches for reviews and complaints.
Online users promoted an alleged weight loss product named HepatoBurn, leading consumers to search Google for reviews and complaints.
Online scammers promoted a moneymaking scheme in June 2025, claiming a special product named Cash Loophole on cashloophole.com was legit.
Online scammers marketed a blood sugar support scam, leading consumers to search Google for GlucoSense reviews and complaints.
Scammers promised a recipe for vision loss as a red root hack or eye flow hack but only truly offered reviews of pills called Retina Clear.
Scammers promoted video ads falsely claiming a man named Phil Kessler created a lottery-defeating app or system named Lotto Money AI.
Online scammers promoted a scheme claiming a fake doctor named Dr. Julian Ross endorsed a turmeric hack weight loss recipe called ProZenith.