Hi,
just to share some new info, have you ever heard about a new weight loss program called "Xina Incredible Fat Loss"? I googled it and seems very promising.
Opinions about it?
Opinions about "Xina Incredible Fat Loss"
Moderators: Boss Man, cassiegose
Re: Opinions about "Xina Incredible Fat Loss"
Avoid it.
It just redirected to a website about something called Venus Factor and we had people promoting that on here recently, without permission.
So therefore I don't like a product claiming to be called Xina Incredible Fat Loss, that redirects you to a Venus Factor website.
Although I was already suspicious when I read it had the word "incredible" in the title, it immediately got me suspicious, as that just looks like sensationalising something that is either a "fad", or an eating and exercising regimen that is directly competing or conflicting with commons sense approaches.
Mainly though I just didn't like it being referred to as one thing, then redirecting you to another site to discover it is called something else, assuming that Xina Incredible Fat Loss exists at all and is not a front for Venus Factor and it's associated entities.
Also the contact page was just an automated form and even if you try to use your web browser options to view the webpage's HTML, javascript and other coding, often when you do that the code does not reveal an email address, that the contact information you provide is forwarded to, because somehow that information is hidden or scrambled by the way the automated form behaves.
In that instance you could try to use Whois to do a reconnoitre on the site owners credentials, although these days some people actually use a "client name prohibited" option and therefore who owns the site and possibly any electronic contact details can be hidden, so all you get is a physical address and possibly a phone number, that could represent a legitimate entity or a bogus one.
It just redirected to a website about something called Venus Factor and we had people promoting that on here recently, without permission.
So therefore I don't like a product claiming to be called Xina Incredible Fat Loss, that redirects you to a Venus Factor website.
Although I was already suspicious when I read it had the word "incredible" in the title, it immediately got me suspicious, as that just looks like sensationalising something that is either a "fad", or an eating and exercising regimen that is directly competing or conflicting with commons sense approaches.
Mainly though I just didn't like it being referred to as one thing, then redirecting you to another site to discover it is called something else, assuming that Xina Incredible Fat Loss exists at all and is not a front for Venus Factor and it's associated entities.
Also the contact page was just an automated form and even if you try to use your web browser options to view the webpage's HTML, javascript and other coding, often when you do that the code does not reveal an email address, that the contact information you provide is forwarded to, because somehow that information is hidden or scrambled by the way the automated form behaves.
In that instance you could try to use Whois to do a reconnoitre on the site owners credentials, although these days some people actually use a "client name prohibited" option and therefore who owns the site and possibly any electronic contact details can be hidden, so all you get is a physical address and possibly a phone number, that could represent a legitimate entity or a bogus one.