Snake oil: Alive and Well

Light shined into dark corners will make the cockroaches scurry for cover. Today we’re talking about Ketonic Labs Green Coffee Bean extract.

Executive Summary: This product is a fraud, this product is a scam, and this product is snake oil.

Here’s the spam email I got this morning:

The spam issue

In the first place, I shouldn’t be getting this junk because I’ve never done business with Ketonic Labs, Micronet Tech or Performemmbers.net. That’s the beauty of the toothless CAN-SPAM act passed by our amazing congressmen, it means that anyone “can spam” you by simply offering an unsubscribe link: thank you very little, you gutless cabrones. Comcast does a pretty good job keeping most spam out of my inbox, but image-based ads like this continue to slip through their filters.

The scam issue

Supplements are almost totally unregulated. You can claim that a product will give you wings and allow you to mate with sphinges (that’s plural for sphinx), as long as you tack on this little disclaimer: “These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.” The FDA will, in general, only come after companies whose ad copy actually does claim such things, despite the disclaimer, and they’ll only take the time to prosecute the biggest players because their resources are limited. But from where I sit, the email itself violates all the rules, and the web page is even worse.

Notice the almost-invisble “ADVERTORIAL” at the top of the page. I hate that word, for what it’s worth.

  • Melt away fat
  • Get high-school slim
  • Potent Fat Burner
  • Effective Appetite Suppressant
  • Works Quickly, Proven Results
  • Affordable Prices
  • Tremendous Weight loss results
  • Increase in Focus
  • Energy Throughout the day
  • No Crash

In short, these people, like hundreds of thousands of others, are dazzling you with weasel words and pseudo-scientific horsehockey, and it’s almost a guarantee that enough people in our country will believe it that they can recoup their costs and walk away with a tidy profit before moving on to another fraud. Make no mistake – they know they are shoveling out the barn- just have a look at this great disclaimer at the bottom of the page:

DISCLAIMER
*THIS PAGE RECEIVES COMPENSATION FOR CLICKS ON OR PURCHASE OF PRODUCTS FEATURED ON THIS SITE.
*The story depicted on this site and the person depicted in the story are not real. rather this story is based on the results that some people who have used these products have achieved. The results portrayed in the story and in the comments are illustrative and may not be the results that you achieve with these products. The depictions on this page are fictitious and indicitive [sic] of potential results. Actual results may vary.

Of course, none of this is new. People have been hawking snake oil since the earliest days:

The less educated a population, the more likely you are to be able to sell them anything. You’d think as the availability of information increases, people would become more enlightened, but the general trend in my own experience is downward; mass media caters to the lowest common denominator and good information on the internet is covered with a layer of bovine ejecta worthy of the Augean stables. The older I get, the more cynical I become about sales and marketing in general, and that’s a problem because I have products of my own to sell, and it’s a constant battle to figure out how to carve out market sector without being a douchebag.

With thanks to B. Kliban

Here’s the product label:

So what is Ketonic selling you for $50.00 a bottle? Caffeine, which has long been combined in numerous diet pills and combined with other quack ingredients including PPA, ginseng, green tea extract and countless others. Double-blind, placebo-based trials, however, seem to indicate that caffeine is not effective as a weight-loss aid. But please, don’t confuse us with the facts – where there’s money to be made, the marketers will sell you all they can.

Conclusion

There are some solid principles for losing weight, but as I have said elsewhere, there is no magic bullet. Do yourself a favor and stay away from the snake oil.

The Old Wolf has spoken.

I can haz accredbitedd Doctorbate degree in just 7 days!

Well, I’ll give this outfit credit – their spelling creativity got the spam message past Gmail’s filters.


Get an accredbitedd online Bachelor’s, Mastder’s or Doctorbate degree in just 7 days!

John Brenley goz4ap4al@zu5ap9v1zz.20m.com

to goz4ap4al

Earn a univedrsity degree for what you already know! No attenddance, no admissions, and no hassles of any kind! All you need is some exdperience or knowledge in your field to obtain an adccredited and verifiable university dedgree!

Empower your career & increadse your salary!

*All of our degredes are issued by fully Licensed and Accreditded Universities.
*No study to do and no tedsts to take. Get a degree based on what you alredady know!
*Professionally produced diplodmas and transcripts.
*Full lifetime empdloyer verification.
*Fastest, most afforddable life experience degree progdram on the net!

To leadrn more, visit us at emburl[dot]com/3q (Replace “[dot]” with a “.” and type in your brodwser)


Well, I pointed my “brodwser” – sounds like a dog’s name – to the requested URL and found out that for only $499.00, I can be the proud owner of an associate, bachelor, master, doctorate, or professorship degree.

“The university your degree comes from does not make public the fact that they offer instant online degree programs. Only those who buy through us will know the name of the university.
All degrees from us use actual college seals with hand signatures. This means you can buy a college degree with confidence.”

Wow, I’ll just bet the university whose seal they are stealing doesn’t tell the public about this. I’m surprised diploma mills like this can get away with operating in today’s environment.

The address emburl.com/3q redirects to something called http://i3ap5y1gya5f.sexyi.am/ – I wish I were smart enough to get past the URL obfuscation and find out where this rot was being hosted, and by whom. Sadly, I’m not. Perhaps I need a doctorbation degree.

The Old Wolf has spoken.

21st Century Ambulance Chasers

Just received this spam in my inbox today:


Dear Friends at [redacted],

While long recognized as an effective pain treatment, proof of natural healings ability to relieve mesothelioma symptoms is now emerging as well. Patients suffering from mesothelioma have experienced a boost in their quality of life, renewed energy and decreased discomfort thanks to this practice. In addition, incorporating natural healing into a mesothelioma treatment regimen can return and maintain balance the body needs to heal itself.

After browsing your site I noticed you mention a few other health related websites on your links page [link redacted]. I would be grateful if you would mention our site, www.mesotheliomasymptoms.com on this page as well. Please let me know if this is something of interest to you and your co-workers. I look forward to hearing from you soon. Feel free to email me with any questions you may have.

Thanks again,
Sarah Anderson
Communications Director

MesotheliomaSymptoms.com, located at 255 S. Orange Avenue Suite 113, Orlando, Florida 32801.


Visiting the linked website, and instead of a valuable resource for people with mesothelioma (basically cancer caused by asbestos inhalation), what I discovered is a thinly-disguised site filled with clickbait terms and SEO content, but around every corner is a solicitation to consult a paralegal or an attorney, explore your legal options, or obtain just compensation. In other words, it’s run by shysters.

For your information, this website is supported by these fine people:

Being a douchebag attorney is bad enough; but a spamming douchebag attorney is a rock-solid guarantee that a) I’ll never do business with you, and b) I’ll take every opportunity to pillory you in public.1

There was a time, back in the Pleistocene era, when banks operated from 9 to 3 and hamburgers cost 25¢, that attorneys were not permitted to advertise; would that it were still so. Now you can’t go to any major city, and I’m talking about you, Las Vegas, where every other billboard is a solicitation by an attorney to get you out of trouble, file for bankruptcy, or sue someone else for damages that you are entitled to.

Q: What’s the difference between a plecostomus and an attorney?
A: One’s a bottom-feeding, scum-sucking, slime-covered creature of the deep; the other one is a fish.

The Old Wolf has spoken.


1Disclaimer: The above post is satire.

The Rise and Fall of Brick and Mortar

A recent article in the LA Times reports that Target has stopped selling Amazon kindles, apparently as punishment for Amazon’s push to get people to us other stores as a showroom for their own products, even going as far as to offer a 5% discount for ship-jumpers.

This is typical corporate thinking – penny wise and pound foolish. They are depriving themselves of a revenue stream, hoping to dissuade consumers from comparison shopping, and simply stated, it won’t work.

I do this all the time, and I don’t have a Kindle. I have an HTC Incredible 2, with a great little barcode scanner app, and if I see something in a store I will always do the online comparison unless I’m just out for something I need right at the moment. This is the new reality, and rather than respond with knee-jerk actions like Target (or the TSA, when it comes to that), stores will simply need to adjust.

It may mean carrying a smaller inventory at the storefront, and offering Amaz0n-comparable discounts for items purchased online. It may mean stores become more showroom than retail outlet, with merchandise that customers can inspect and then order on the spot by scanning a QR code. It may mean something else altogether. But whatever it means, stores need to come to grips with the phenomenon, rather than assume that some chuckleheaded response will make the problem go away.

The Old Wolf has Spoken