Index/Topics/Deceptive Marketing

Deceptive Marketing

The topic is about the tactics used by scammers to deceive consumers, including fake news sites, doctored videos, and phony seals.

Fact-Checks

6 results
Jan 20, 2026
Most Viewed

is dr oz hear better a scam for resolving tinnitus

Marketing that invokes Dr. Oz-style endorsements for “Hear Better”/Audizen-style tinnitus cures relies on sensational claims and fabricated endorsements, and should be treated as a likely scam until i...

Jan 24, 2026
Most Viewed

Is SugarClean and Dr. Phil's contention with it a Sham?

The available reporting shows strong indicators that “” and similar products marketed with / imagery are part of an aggressive, misleading online rather than a credible, physician‑endorsed medical bre...

Feb 3, 2026

How can consumers verify whether a celebrity endorsement of a supplement is legitimate?

Consumers can verify by checking for explicit disclosures of paid relationships, corroborating the endorsement on the celebrity’s verified channels, and looking for independent evidence — like third‑p...

Jan 29, 2026

What corporate entity (business name and registration number) appears on Memo Genesis packaging or invoices?

Reporting reviewed does not produce any image or transcription of packaging or invoices that explicitly shows a corporate name and registration number, so there is no direct, source-backed statement o...

Jan 22, 2026

Does Lipomax require proof of purchase or unopened product for a full refund?

Public reporting on returns is contradictory: the company’s promotions were advertised in some places as a “no‑questions‑asked” 60–90 day money‑back guarantee, but customer complaints and third‑party ...

Jan 5, 2026

NUEROCEPT SUPPLEMENT CAPSULES

Neurocept is marketed as a natural nootropic capsule for memory, focus and brain health and has generated sharply mixed reporting: official sites and some review outlets highlight branded ingredients ...