{“type”:”text”,”text”:”This is Steven Chayer with the DisputeVoice Consumer Protection Minute. nIf you’ve been scammed, suspect fraud, or want protection? nYou’re in the right place.nnListen, Facebook ads are like a Vegas slot machine—lots of flashing lights, promises of big payoffs, but sometimes the house is playing with loaded dice. I’m talking about ad fraud that’s draining budgets faster than a teenager with your credit card at the mall.nnHere’s how it works: You pay for a thousand clicks, but half come from bots sitting in some server farm, clicking away like caffeinated woodpeckers. Your engagement metrics look great on paper, but your actual customers? They’re as real as a three-dollar bill.nnWell, I’ll be cow-kicked—some operations create entire fake websites just to host your ads and generate phony traffic. It’s like paying for a billboard in the middle of nowhere, except the only viewers are tumbleweeds and automated scripts.nnWatch for these red flags: Traffic spikes at weird hours, suspiciously perfect click-through rates, and zero actual sales despite “amazing engagement.” Trust your gut—if something smells fishier than Boston Harbor at low tide, it probably is.nnThis has been the DisputeVoice Consumer Protection Minute. Remember, friends, scammers rely on victims’ embarrassment to stay silent while they find their next targets—your friends and family. Don’t let them. DisputeVoice publishes their names and evidence online, ensuring the facts appear prominently in Google searches. Check out DisputeVoice.com for the latest posts, and watch for us on the frontlines of consumer protection.”}
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