And you believe those? I saw a documentary about a Norwegian 1st class scammer earlier this year. One of the secretaries had a full time job writing false reviews for the firm. Tons of PCs and multiple accounts across various computers. I wouldn't trust those reviews one minute.
Hello Laissez Faire, This is very true. Reviews are fake. Internet Markets and Sellers include fake reviews as marketing business expense.
CarSales people have been known to post on Internet Forums to "covertly" promote the Brand they have a Contract with. In Communist countries you're at the mercy of State run propoganda. In Capitalist Countries your at the mercy of Business etc propoganda.
Trustpilot shouldn't be "trusted" IMHO. They constantly flag and remove reviews with no investigation into the legitimacy of the reviewer. It would be wise to believe none of what you hear and half of what you see. These "traders" on Twitter are in the business of selling a lifestyle and a dream. He has an indicator and course to sell. Apex has an affiliate program. This can easily be a "rub my back I'll rub yours" deal. The truth we won't entirely ever know. But when you have money involved you can never be too cautious of ulterior motives.
Hello Sprout, I doubt this is true. Anyone making a +$1 million trading would not tell the world publicly or they can be robbed and hurt. This is a fake and scam. The person is also selling trading services and courses. lol
By default, I always treat the info as fake/scam. I wouldn't waste my time investigating whether it is true or false. But I don't mind putting effort into scamming the scammer.