Don't fall for this weightloss pills scam

Tony Levene
by Lovemoney Staff Tony Levene on 27 October 2012  |  Comments 9 comments

These pills promise to make the pounds fall off. But the only pounds you'll lose are the ones in your wallet.

Don't fall for this weightloss pills scam

I've got a new best friend. And it is someone I didn't even know existed until just a week ago. Since then he or she has sent me no less than 15 emails – that's an average of two a day, but some days I have received three or four.

Now I realise that this is nothing compared to the texting between love-lorn teenagers who, I am reliably informed, will often send each other 40 or 50 messages a day.  But for someone like me, of perhaps more settled years, it's a tremendous amount.

The subject lines on the first few started with “hello”, then – a real tease – they were left blank. But more recently it has been “your friend” and then “fasting”. I admit I don't understand this last one unless the writer is so besotted that she or he has given up eating until I respond positively.

How are you getting on, heartlover?

My new friend is called SkyRace461 so that's why I am not entirely sure of the gender of the sender. But I'll assume it's a woman – after all, I don't expect most males to address me as “Hi, My Darling” or with “Do you remember our last meeting?” or “How are you getting on, heartlover?”

Besides these passionate greetings, all the emails came with internet links. Back in the real world, I expected pornography at the other end or perhaps one of those get rich quick schemes where you sell reports on selling get-rich quick schemes in order to - you guessed it - get rich quick.

Instead, the first few I opened, all appearing quite different, all led to the same consumer website where the story was headlined “London Stores Struggle to keep the popular fat burner in stock!”  I suspect that had I been in the United States, it would have been New York or Los Angeles stores instead.

And what is the “fat burner”?  It's green coffee beans – beans that have yet to be roasted (and turn brown). It appears that green beans contain Chlorogenic Acid which eats into obesity – the acid is lost once they are roasted. The beans are turned into pills – the small print concedes there is no medical approval – which, it is claimed, then make you slimmer without boring exercise or diets.  But whether that works or not, it is hard to imagine a shortage. After all, coffee beans are imported by the ten tonne load.

Some of my friend Skyrace's links also point to Raspberry Ketones (whatever they are) as a weight loss pill.

A grain of truth

Like so many of these non-medically approved supplements, there is a grain of truth in the claim.  There is some evidence that  Chlorogenic Acid can slow the release of glucose into the bloodstream after a meal – it's also found in potatoes, peaches, prunes and bamboo. But the claim that it has been scientifically tested is more tenuous.

Green coffee fans point to a published study although this was based on just 16 people in India and was published within two weeks of completion. Most research has to go through a long “peer review” process which can take months or more. And some think it could just be the caffeine which can suppress appetite as well as making you more active, burning off calories.

This is not a mega scam which will cause anyone to lose a fortune. But it is aimed at those with less money and could cost them around £50 a month. Moreover, it could give false hope. Science continually looks for, but fails, to find a real fat burning pill.

Beating the spam filter

And there is the question of what happened to my spam filter.  My internet service provider TalkTalk has an ultra-fierce spam filter which never lets me see what it considers to be spam – I am not allowed a spam inbox. So all sorts of legitimate stuff is swallowed up – the weekly Transport for London email on weekend tube closures for starters.

But serious spammers know how to beat the filters. Every one of my Skyrace emails was different – header, contents, and links – so defeating the devices that should protect me.  Perhaps I should ask TalkTalk for a refund!

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Comments (9)

  • ameslyne
    Love rating 2
    ameslyne said

    I have used the Raspberry Ketone programme (I'm not sure what they are either), in conjunction with the Weight Watchers programme. I lost weight, but wasn't sure which was causing it, so came off the pills. I started to put weight back on. I leave the conclusion to yourselves.

    Report on 27 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • seanhaywood
    Love rating 1
    seanhaywood said

    I have a weight loss program that works. It's guaranteed and I'll let you all have this for free, no need to send me a cheque.

    Just ensure you expend more energy than you ingest. Shimple!

    So either start an exercise regime that ensures you expend more energy than you're ingesting (eating), or reduce your intake i.e eat less!

    Report on 27 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • Bifor
    Love rating 0
    Bifor said

    Yeah. Eat less and take more exercise...works every time. Trick is to bring yourself to do it, but there aint any other way!

    Report on 27 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • PoohBah
    Love rating 19
    PoohBah said

    @ameslyne: Since I didn't know what raspberry ketone (RK) is either, I took the trouble to find out. According to Wikipedia, mice fed with RK up to 2% of bodyweight showed signs that weight gain was prevented, but there was no corresponding effect in rats. There is apparently also no clinical evidence for this effect in humans, although no doubt the purveyors of quack remedies would wish you to believe otherwise. Furthermore, one nutritional supplements manufacturer has actually cautioned against its use. So I believe I have now drawn all the appropriate conclusions.

    I like Billy Connolly's take on the causes of excessive weight: "You're not retaining water, you're retaining chips!" and Jasper Carrott (with appropriate gestures): "This hole is bigger than this hole!"

    Report on 27 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • john03
    Love rating 5
    john03 said

    I am amazed that you clicked on a link in a message from an unknown sender. You are lucky that you only got to see an ad for a useless product, not some nasty malware. This really is something none of us should ever, ever do.

    Report on 28 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • windlesham1
    Love rating 14
    windlesham1 said

    Weight loss is very simple- try alternate day fasting. It's free and as you learn to tame your body's cravings, you lose weight and become the master of your own destiny.

    Why would you want to endure a lingering agonising death from obesity when all you have to do is stop stuffing yer fat face, people?

    Stupid lazy ignorant people need to learn they can no longer get a free ride.

    Think Ian Duncan Smith doesn't see the link between fat slobs and cost to the nation?

    Report on 28 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • PoohBah
    Love rating 19
    PoohBah said

    @john03: Tony might have got the malware too, and has yet to discover it.

    Report on 28 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Klawman
    Love rating 17
    Klawman said

    Alternate day fasting - although 100% effective - is beyond what most people can manage. Try fasting 2 days a week. Eat a maximum of 600 calories (500 for women) on fast days and what you like on feast days. It's slower than alternate day fasting, but it's still effective.

    The alternative is to cut 500 calories a day. It'll result in a fat loss of about 1lb a week - which is sustainable. Crash diets can result in spectacular weight losses over the first week or so - but it's illusory, as it's mainly water loss.

    Excercise - unless very, very intense - won't burn off enough calories to cause a significant weight loss, especially as excercise often increases apetite. However, the health benefits are more than worthwhile.

    Report on 31 October 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves
  • Brixton Dave
    Love rating 4
    Brixton Dave said

    I got the malware from a Green Coffee link like that - ended up sending spam to all the contacts on my Yahoo account. This spam + malware thing is still going on with Yahoo email accounts - Channel 4 news covered it a couple of weeks ago.

    Report on 07 April 2013  |  Love thisLove  0 loves

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