A story of revenge: "How I beat an online course scammer"

He became completely unserious when he used “soy” unironically.

1 Like

Personally, I’m going with Bojack.

2 Likes

If this guy is charging $2,100 for his course on a site that looks as crappy as his with writing this bad, he probably noticed the scammer because it was his only sale.

Congratulations, BoinbBoing. You’ve published a stealth ad disguised as a takedown of the very site it’s advertising. He gives the site address, he conspicuously mentions the courses offered and their total value, the monthly membership price etc. He appeals to “smart” people who want something for nothing and are willing to stiff the original course creators, while his terrible writing will probably run off anyone legitimately interested in Internet marketing. It’s everything you could want in ad copy.

3 Likes

Because he used one of his precious few capital letters there, I assumed Soy was the name of a payment processor with crummy policies or something. After reading the whole thing, getting an idea of this guy’s shittiness, and finding there’s no payment processor called Soy, apparently he’s just using a shitty MRA insult, and is such a bad writer it’s not even clear that’s what he’s doing. Christ what a dumb asshole - thank goodness fewer people have access to his probably awful ‘course.’

5 Likes

I wonder if any UK lawyers could comment on whether Kulp has opened himself up to lawsuits by Howard Jerry, by publishing Jerry’s driver’s license, home address, etc.

IANAL, but I would not be worried about this: the “very smart” guy did not even suspect that the driver’s license is a blatant fake.

As a matter of fact, I would rather like him to be sued…

2 Likes

Talking about which jurisdiction you are, young padawan?

1 Like

This topic was automatically closed after 5 days. New replies are no longer allowed.