- #1
- 848
- 2
Superbooster™ cell phone "booster" fraud
The following image is a freeze-frame from the product ad, as found on the parent website of the marketing company who makes and sells the product:
http://img33.imageshack.us/img33/2258/superbooster.jpg
This is an image of a type of RF-based EAS tag, commonly used in libraries, from the How Stuff Works website:
Yeah, nothing suspicious there, right? Obviously, they buy these EAS tags, slap their own label on them (at a total cost of less than $1, most likely) and sell these things to gullible sheeple. While there are lots of these useless things out there, this is a particularly egregious example because there is not even the pretense of designing an original product; it's just out-and-out fraud. I urge everyone to report these shysters.
The following image is a freeze-frame from the product ad, as found on the parent website of the marketing company who makes and sells the product:
http://img33.imageshack.us/img33/2258/superbooster.jpg
This is an image of a type of RF-based EAS tag, commonly used in libraries, from the How Stuff Works website:
Yeah, nothing suspicious there, right? Obviously, they buy these EAS tags, slap their own label on them (at a total cost of less than $1, most likely) and sell these things to gullible sheeple. While there are lots of these useless things out there, this is a particularly egregious example because there is not even the pretense of designing an original product; it's just out-and-out fraud. I urge everyone to report these shysters.
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