Travel0 min ago
A Scam Warning
15 Answers
Can't believe I fell for it, but it looked so genuine.
It was an advert for Keto pills and there were photos of Dragons Den and famous people who have lost weight like Dawn French, I honestly thought it was genuine, so I sent for the special offer of 5 months supply for £39.99.
Fortunately, my bank realised it wasn't my usual type of transaction and they blocked 2 attempts of someone trying to take £198 out of my account.
They have now blocked them and told me if it looks too good to be true etc.
So, just a little heads in case you see the ad.
It was an advert for Keto pills and there were photos of Dragons Den and famous people who have lost weight like Dawn French, I honestly thought it was genuine, so I sent for the special offer of 5 months supply for £39.99.
Fortunately, my bank realised it wasn't my usual type of transaction and they blocked 2 attempts of someone trying to take £198 out of my account.
They have now blocked them and told me if it looks too good to be true etc.
So, just a little heads in case you see the ad.
Answers
See these ads all the time, even on here. I'm glad your bank intervened, could have been a lot worse losing all the wrong pounds!
12:37 Wed 26th May 2021
-- answer removed --
barsel: "Can't believe I fell for it, but it looked so genuine" - how can tablets help you lose weight? ketosis is a known nutritional condition that is essentially starvation, denial of Carbohydrates is one method of arriving at that state. I don't see how tablets can help. Wanna buy some magic beans?
'Keto' was the big thing with spammers here up until recently. (I'd typically ban at least half a dozen spammers advertising keto products daily). However 'keto' ads are now becoming much rarer, with 'CBD' spam now taking its place.
I suspect that CBD oil scams (using actual ads, rather than just spam posts) will also become far more common. Remember that The Answerbank gets its ads from third-party sources, some of whom don't seem to be too bothered about the trustworthiness of the people that they accept advertising from, so its wise to be wary of any such ads, even on this site. You have been warned!
I suspect that CBD oil scams (using actual ads, rather than just spam posts) will also become far more common. Remember that The Answerbank gets its ads from third-party sources, some of whom don't seem to be too bothered about the trustworthiness of the people that they accept advertising from, so its wise to be wary of any such ads, even on this site. You have been warned!