I was thinking about telling people how i was scammed!

There was similar back and forth about a scam by another new member today on a different thread.
I was just about to post what I said above.

Then Poof!
The entire thread disappeared.
The moderators had enough and I am guessing that member may now be restricted from posting for some time.
Re-read the Forum rules and New member limitations while you are brushing up.
 
I am pretty sure someone tried to scam me the first week I joined this Forum I didn't fall for it so not sure. But after I put them off the never hit me up again.
 
I'm going to bed, but God as my witness if this thread is gone when I wake up, I'm gonna sulk about it. Let us have nice things, God damnit!
 
I an finding this thread irritating and I don't get irritated very easily.

Basically saying I got scammed but I don't want to tell you the method because one or more of you might be scammers and learn a new trick? Do I have that right?

So what's the point of this post? You got scammed? You don't want to divulge the method?
I honestly would be surprised if it was something that hasn't been done in the past. Best scams are the simplest and you wouldn't be the first, nor the last to fall for one.
 
I mean what do you want people to beg you? You need to find something more important to do with your life than than try and engagement bait.
 
I divide peptide "scams" related to overseas suppliers into six main categories:

1. The Impersonation Scam. This is when people fall into the trap of not being diligent about the contact details of a source. They mistake the scam username "PɘptideLady17" for the legit username "PeptideLady17". They'll almost always use the same avatar and do as much as they can to appear as if they're the real rep. This is often compounded when someone joins a Discord or Telegram group and are contacted by the impersonator offering them exactly what they need, or they trust some seemingly "helpful" online person who provides them with the contact info.

2. The Website Scam. 99% of overseas sources DO NOT HAVE a website. This isn't fucking Amazon or Walmart. Stop Googling "Peptide Lady 17" and assuming that peptidelady17.com is really their website and safe to use for ordering. While there are a couple suppliers with websites, they still take orders via email/WhatsApp/Telegram, etc. so anyone relying on a website to order is setting themselves up to be scammed.

3. The Fake Company Scam. This is where those asinine "Has anybody heard of?" or "Has anybody bought from?" posts come back to bite people in the ass, because that's how 99% of fake company scammers start getting their name in front of people. Then the adventurous freelancers figuring they can save an additional 10 cents by tracking down this previously unheard of seller that some rando mentioned on the internet. Or, again, thinking they "know a better way", they start perusing Made in China, EChemi, Global Sources, or even Alibaba and AliExpress in search of that gem of a supplier that nobody else has discovered yet.

4. The "Exit" Scam. This is when a previously "reputable" seller takes the money and runs. This scam has two main ways of unfolding. Sometimes it's their plan from the start; build a reputation and fulfill a number of orders, then when the time is right, run some can't-resist promotion that gets everyone buying, string them along as long as possible (adding as many more victims as possible along the way), until finally taking the midnight train to ghost town. The rest of the time, usually due to government intervention or other outside forces, they vanish into the wind, with no answers or explanations.

5. The Extra Shipping/Customs Clearance Fee Scam. This is always an add-on to any of the first three scams where the "sales rep" tells you that your package has been seized or held up in customs and requires an additional payment in order to facilitate clearing customs and get your package delivered. 100% scam every single time.

6. The Imagined Scam. These are the Karens and Kevins who get all bent out of shape and start screaming scam when they sent payment at 10AM US east coast time (which is 10PM in China), but haven't received a tracking number within a few hours. This also covers people who cry scam at a product they've determined is "bunk" based on their "feels". Bad products do happen, but are rarely part of a scam and more likely just a screwup. Even clear-cut screwups and bad customer service do not equal scam.

There are a variety of subtle differences possible with all of these scams, and some we haven't seen yet or that haven't been invented yet, so it's impossible to cover every possibility.
 

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