These people knew all my credit information and credit cards, mortgage information, my credit balances, credit card numbers. They told me I was being...
Apr 23, 2026
I was messaged, by name, about a property I haven't owned in over 10 years. It was a very vague message that would make most people contact them for clarification.
Apr 23, 2026
Received 2 text messages stating my TD bank N.A. account with LVNV was sold to Halsted Financial and that I can pay them about 2k to pay it off. I...
Apr 23, 2026
Got an email stating that I was a potential candidate for a data entry position paying $27 per hour. Sent a link for an assessment. Next received...
Apr 23, 2026
I was contacted by email about a job I applied to on LinkedIn, they set up a Microsoft meet and conducted the interview, after questioning I received...
Apr 23, 2026
According to my order documents my address is correctly listed on my receipt. I had a tracking number to follow my delivery and it arrived to a PO BOX in a different state a few days ago. Per USPS my item was never addressed to my residence and had be intended to go to that PO Box from the beginning.
The interesting thing is that they try to fake sale “Samsonite” luggages and using another brands name “aldo” for their fake website “aldostores.shop” and the location said Singapore.
Inquired about the legitimacy of the business through appropriate channels such as the TWC to verify the business was approved by the state and confirmed the business is unregulated. Also, the state of Texas prohibits contracts by unregulated career schools, academies, or courses. When inquired there was no response.
Boot camp participants filed several FTC complaints due to unresponsiveness, lack of fulfillment of the services and goods as promised, and legitimacy concerns. The website shows the business owner as having experience in several areas offered in the program, but companies have confirmed the experience is not true.
I and many others are requesting that the FTC investigate the bootcamp for its facilitation of copyright infringement, fraud, and for broader harms that the company may already be upholding. Based on the Texas Workforce Commission, the bootcamp does not make available their outcomes reports and when asked there is no response. They may be failing to conduct even basic oversight of its hundreds of cohorts, putting students at risk and necessitating immediate action from the Federal Trade Commission, the Better Business Bureau, and the Texas Workforce Commission.
As boot camp participants and students, we received an educational product that fell far short of what was marketed, with advertised jobs and mentorships—let alone six-figure salaries—proving illusory. I was unaware and defrauded by this unregulated program that also pulled content from major companies and added surcharges.
And by the time I could realize the depth of this fraud, lies by omission and little embellishments, the school/program is partially finished and now involved in several news articles and all over Twitter and TikTok for scams and fraud.
The program's predatory nature leans on the fact that students may be unaware of industry boot camp programs and the contract relies on the lack of experience of boot camp agreements by industry boot camps. It specifically targeted its program toward economically vulnerable students.
The program has already leveraged the smokescreen of positive rhetoric and novelty surrounding a "6 figure career" to lock students into predatory contracts. The “boot camp” is nothing more than a predatory scheme to trap hundreds of students into lofty but false promises of high-paying jobs in the tech sector.
Received instead a set of chopsticks that I didn’t order
But, they didn’t make shipment and still demanded me extra money without any specific explanation and bills.
I have been asking them refunding but they never responded my asking.