http://www.11alive.com/news/article_news.aspx?storyid=111894
http://www.wmgt.com/node/6444
Some scam artist has set up a website for a WACT Action 25 News in Macon, GA. Only there is no Action 25 (there is a WGXA 24, which is Macon's Fox affiliate).
Scam site: http://www.action25news.com (Remember - this is a scam)
They apparently are using the site as a front for training DVD's. They have someone pretending to be a consumer reporter is giving glowing reviews of these DVDs - which if you order, you will never recieve.
The address they give for their studio location does not exist, but a radiator repair shop is located in the spot where the address would be if it were real (the owners of the shop had no knowledge of the scam until WMGT/Macon showed up at their door).
If the consumer reporter is giving a glowing opinion about something (and it is not a consumer advisor like WSB's Clark Howard, who is clearly not a reporter), it is a scam (Alarm Bell #1).
I looked at the site, and it looks like a real IBS site (IBS does websites for Cox, NBC, Hearst-Argyle, and Meredith). The scammers behind this site have lifted some code from the WSOC/Charlotte website, because there is a section refering that says "If you are having trouble viewing Channel 9 or Action 64, please tell us your Zip Code and check one of the following:" (Action 64 is WAXN). But they are using an RSS aggrigator to get the news headlines from Google (Alarm Bell #2).
The site with the review (accessed by clicking on the "Action 25" link on the top navbar) is another site at another domain with a completly different design altogether that looks like there was no lifted code (Alarm Bell #3).
The domain name is registered to a Frank Milian, but it is a private registration. It was registered on 12/2/07, so this scam has only been around the past month or so.
If the FBI or the FTC doesn't shut them down, Cox and IBS need to sue these scammers for stealing website code. That should shut these people down (for a while).
http://www.wmgt.com/node/6444
Some scam artist has set up a website for a WACT Action 25 News in Macon, GA. Only there is no Action 25 (there is a WGXA 24, which is Macon's Fox affiliate).
Scam site: http://www.action25news.com (Remember - this is a scam)
They apparently are using the site as a front for training DVD's. They have someone pretending to be a consumer reporter is giving glowing reviews of these DVDs - which if you order, you will never recieve.
The address they give for their studio location does not exist, but a radiator repair shop is located in the spot where the address would be if it were real (the owners of the shop had no knowledge of the scam until WMGT/Macon showed up at their door).
If the consumer reporter is giving a glowing opinion about something (and it is not a consumer advisor like WSB's Clark Howard, who is clearly not a reporter), it is a scam (Alarm Bell #1).
I looked at the site, and it looks like a real IBS site (IBS does websites for Cox, NBC, Hearst-Argyle, and Meredith). The scammers behind this site have lifted some code from the WSOC/Charlotte website, because there is a section refering that says "If you are having trouble viewing Channel 9 or Action 64, please tell us your Zip Code and check one of the following:" (Action 64 is WAXN). But they are using an RSS aggrigator to get the news headlines from Google (Alarm Bell #2).
The site with the review (accessed by clicking on the "Action 25" link on the top navbar) is another site at another domain with a completly different design altogether that looks like there was no lifted code (Alarm Bell #3).
The domain name is registered to a Frank Milian, but it is a private registration. It was registered on 12/2/07, so this scam has only been around the past month or so.
If the FBI or the FTC doesn't shut them down, Cox and IBS need to sue these scammers for stealing website code. That should shut these people down (for a while).