The Acai Max product is a scam. Pure and simple. Let me explain some of the problems.

Firstly the product itself is crap. It’s a poor quality drum dried acai that is mixed with lots of cheap ingredients to bring production cost down. It’s so far behind the quality of modern freeze dried acai products that it’s not even funny.

Secondly the sites that are pushing this product TRICK YOU into thinking that they are something they are not: a real news site. As one of the more aggressive examples, www.usahealthnews.org and its new reader Julia Miller are prime culprits. Of course, www.usahealthnews.org and Julia Miller are both fragments of some over-imaginative fraudster somewhere.

Thirdly the scam continues indefinitely… the ‘free trial offer’ presented by the site is actually a really nasty way of getting unsuspecting customers to sign up for a continuing ‘subscription’ to the product. Customers will pay up to $100 dollars of their hard earned cash to receive something they never even knew they wanted. Of course the subscription is very difficult – in some cases impossible – to cancel.

The fake news scam is becoming increasingly common as the scammers realize that they can just change the name of the news site and the reporter with relative ease, and repeat the scam at their leisure. Just look at some of the sites we found in the graphic below.

For more information on free trial scams check out our acai free trial scams page.

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