Don't Let Them Take Your Money and Run!
The Internet is full of scams and fraud. Many are in the form
of "income opportunities" and "investment programs." Sometimes
it's hard to tell if a company is legitimate or not.
Unfortunately, many of them aren't and people get scammed into
losing hundreds, even thousands, of dollars.
The Internet gives bogus companies the opportunity to "take the
money and run" with less chance of getting caught than in the
offline world. It's fairly easy to hide behind a website and an,
oftentimes fake, e-mail address.
I recently came upon this program, Invest With Gold,
(http://www.investwithgold.com) when asked by one of my
newsletter subscribers to try and find out whether it was
legitimate. It only took me about 5 minutes to make my decision
on this one.
Here's a direct quote from the main page:
"Welcome to InvestWithGold.com, Consistantly paying out our
investors since 1998! The only site on the internet utilizing
the currency exchange markets for our investors, and making them
money. We offer you up to 800% PROFIT in 2 weeks, GUARANTEED,
and completly hands free! And best of all, you are NEVER in
danger of losing your investment capitol!"
So they invest their clients money into foreign currencies and
make a profit. The profits, less a 1% service fee, go back to
the clients, thus earning money on their investment.
It sounds pretty good, doesn't it? 800% profit in 2 weeks? What
a deal! And they've been in business for 6 years, so they must
be good, right?
Not so fast! Keep reading before you hand over your money.
The second paragraph on the page invites the website visitor to
"Just look what our investors have to say" which is a clickable
link to a message board for investors to add their comments.
The problem is the message board is empty! I'd assume happy
clients would post *something* there. (Well, maybe they're
working on that page. I'll give them the benefit of the doubt.)
I continued reading the main page and saw this:
"Although we can not "legally" say you will never lose any
money, we can tell you that we have NEVER LOST MONEY in over 6
years! If you're interested, take a look at the tracking
section, to see how other people's investments are doing, and
then read the message board, and comments from our clients."
I'd venture to say that "they" probably haven't lost any money,
but their clients, if they have any, probably have. I already
knew the message board was empty, so I decided to check out the
tracking section.
Here's where it got *really* good. I went to the page and, lo
and behold, I found a list of e-mail addresses of this company's
clients! They didn't list the complete extension (.com, .net or
whatever) but the rest was there.
Wait a minute! Don't they have a privacy policy? I wouldn't want
to have *my* e-mail address plastered there for the whole world
to see. How unethical!
I slowly scrolled down the page and certain things caught my
attention. I recognized 10-15 names as Internet business owners,
several of whom are quite well-known. So I e-mailed 8 of them to
ask if they've really invested money with this company and, if
so, whether or not it was a good investment.
I wasn't surprised to learn that, of the 4 people who have
replied to me so far, *none* of them has ever heard of this
company, much less invested money with them. (I e-mailed them
less than 48 hours prior to this writing, so hopefully the
remaining 4 will reply to me soon. But I don't expect their
answers to be any different.)
I also noticed as I scanned the listing of "clients" that
approximately 75% of the e-mail addresses looked like this:
admin@ info@ support@ subscribe@ webmaster@ comments@ orders@
sales@ newsletter@ unsubscribe@
Hold the boat! Why on earth would people use their website
contact-type e-mail addresses for their investment program? It
looked like the website owner bought or harvested e-mail
addresses to use as his "client" list.
A lot of the addresses were for the same domain, but with a
different "name" - i.e. admin@business, contact@business,
help@business, etc. And many of the addresses listed were
autoresponders to subscribe to newsletters or receive other
information.
Here a few e-mail addresses that I got a real kick out of:
jeeves1@askjeeves.co.uk someone@nowhere gov@gov.state.hi.us
comments@scambusters abuse@verisign
But the absolute *best* one is .... (drum roll please) .....
dateline.consumeralert@nbc
Now, what should I do with that one? You guessed it! I'm sending
them a copy of this article. I wonder what they'll think when
they see that they supposedly invested in this program? What I
really wonder is how fast they'll get it shut down so people
don't lose money to such scam artists.
In all fairness, I looked at the contact information at the
website. Here's what it says:
"Unlike many 'businesses' on the internet, we do not 'hide'
behind our website. You are free to contact us at any time, even
the CEO if need be. All the information is listed below, or use
our Live Help chat on the left."
Unfortunately, the live chat was "temporarily down" so, of
course, I e-mailed the CEO with several questions and I'm
waiting for a reply. (But I do find it strange that his contact
address is a hotmail account.)
At the time of this writing, I checked the list of "clients"
again. They've updated it and the e-mail addresses I saw 2 days
ago are no longer there. Neither are the domain names for those
that have taken their place. And most of the addresses now
appear to be personal addresses, not those of business websites.
They've also posted this message:
"Sorry, but we had to remove the ending of the email address
because we received a ton of complaints about someone spamming
our investors"
I wonder if that's the *real* reason. My guess is that at least
one of the people I wrote to contacted them, probably threatened
legal action, and the website owner bought a new list of e-mail
addresses to post as his "clients."
But wait! There's more! I decided to check the domain
registration information at WhoIs.com. And *that* gave me yet
another clue that something might be rotten in Denmark.
The website name, InvestWithGold.com, was registered on April
19, 2004 - a mere 10 days before I discovered the website and 12
days before I wrote this article. And yet the company claims to
have been in business since 1998!
The dates the "clients" supposedly earned huge returns on their
investments were from April 9th through 16th the first time I
visited the site. Today's update shows profits for April 17th
through 23rd.
So, unless the owner changed the name of his company and/or
registered the new name with a different domain registrar, his
"clients" made money *before* he even had his website!
Granted, he could have had his business offline until recently.
But the copyright at the bottom of the site says "2001-2004"
which indicates that he's had the website since 2001.
Alas! A scammer's work is never done! They'll always find a new
scam to run and con as many people as they can. They have no
integrity and they don't care who they rip off.
Always do your homework before investing in any income
opportunity. Don't let yourself get caught up in the bogus "get
rich quick" aspects that can sound so good. You don't want to
learn the hard way that they aren't what they claim to be.