drdread
  • drdread
  • 100% (Exalted)
  • Advanced Member Topic Starter
a day ago
How can I find the correct URL of this video: youtube.com/api/stats/qoe?fmt=134&afmt=251&cpn=8EFBNp65VD6yiE_N&el=embedded&ns=docid=oip96so4-ao&ei=AL8RaLKNCdzCmLAPt6zeyA0&event=streamingstats&plid=AAYz-MiwQXDqcTgK&cbr=Chrome&cbrver=125.0.0.0&
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sirclesadmin
a day ago

The URL you posted is not the actual YouTube video URL - it's a YouTube API telemetry request used for internal video quality metrics, not for playback or viewing. However, you can extract the video ID from it.




How to find the correct video URL:


In your query string, look for:


docid=oip96so4-ao

This docid value is the YouTube video ID, which is usually 11 characters long.




Constructing the proper URL:


You can turn that docid into a watchable URL like this:


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oip96so4-ao



Summary



Would you like me to look up that video's title or metadata?



drdread
  • drdread
  • 100% (Exalted)
  • Advanced Member Topic Starter
a day ago
It's a scam video...
sirclesadmin
a day ago

Got it - thanks for clarifying. If it's a scam video, here's how you can proceed to report it and possibly gather evidence for takedown or investigation:




1. Visit the Video


Go to the URL you built:



https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oip96so4-ao



Open it in a private/incognito window (optional but safer), and confirm it's indeed a scam (e.g., fake giveaways, crypto doubling, impersonation, etc.).




2. Report It to YouTube


Click the three-dot menu beneath the video (next to the thumbs up/down) and select "Report". Choose the most relevant reason:



  • Scams or fraud

  • Spam or misleading

  • Impersonation


Add a short description like:



"This video is impersonating a legitimate company/person and promoting a financial scam."





3. Preserve Evidence


Scam videos often get taken down quickly - but not before others are harmed. You may want to:



  • Screenshot the video, comments, and any links in the description.

  • Save the page as PDF or use archive.today to capture it.

  • Extract channel info (channel ID, creation date, other videos).




4. Optional: Report to Other Authorities


If you're tracking scam campaigns or want to alert platforms:





If You Want to Automate Scam Detection (SEO or Watchdog use-case)


You could write a script to:



  • Parse YouTube API feeds or telemetry like the one you found.

  • Extract video IDs.

  • Fetch video metadata (title, description, view count).

  • Flag likely scams based on patterns (e.g., keywords, excessive crypto wallet mentions, fake livestreams).


Would you like help designing such a script or tool to catch and report scam videos more effectively?



drdread
  • drdread
  • 100% (Exalted)
  • Advanced Member Topic Starter
a day ago
It is a difficult thing to get taken down as, firstly it is unlisted on YT and secondly it is just full of promises and the website that refers to it does have a warning, albeit a proposterous one: 'This site and the products and services offered on this site are not associated, affiliated, endorsed, or sponsored by Google, Digistore, eBay, Amazon, Yahoo or Bing nor have they been reviewed tested or certified by Google, Digistore, Yahoo, eBay, Amazon, or Bing. The typical purchaser does not make any money using this system. Bulletproof Profit does not guarantee income or success, and examples shown in this presentation do not represent an indication of future success or earnings. The company declares the information shared is true and accurate.'
drdread
  • drdread
  • 100% (Exalted)
  • Advanced Member Topic Starter
a day ago

You've hit upon the precise problem: it's crafted just below the takedown threshold - slippery, insidious, and parasitic by design.




The Scam's Structure:


You're looking at a gray-zone affiliate funnel scam that avoids detection by:



  • Hosting the scam pitch on YouTube Unlisted - not discoverable via search.

  • Linking from disposable websites with legally toothless disclaimers.

  • Using pseudo-legal weasel language like:

    "not associated with Google, Amazon..."
    "does not guarantee income..."
    "examples do not represent actual results..."





This is intentional obfuscation, engineered by marketing grifters to weaponize plausibility and circumvent enforcement by Google, ad networks, and regulators.




What's Actually Going On:


These videos are likely part of:



  • A CPA (cost-per-action) funnel, where the scammer gets paid just for getting people to sign up or click.

  • A boiler room follow-up, where the lead gets a call selling worthless software, coaching, or crypto schemes.

  • A layered affiliate system (e.g., via Digistore24 or similar) to wash the trail.




Strategy for Exposure or Takedown:


1. Report with Context


When reporting the video to YouTube, include the full referring funnel, such as:



  • Source website URL.

  • Mention that it is unlisted and shared through affiliate deception.

  • Say it's part of a multi-layered misleading income scheme.


2. Map the Funnel


Document:



  • Referrer site domain and whois.

  • Any redirects to Digistore or other platforms.

  • Tracking parameters or IDs (often seen in URLs).


3. Expose the Pattern


These actors thrive on invisibility. To disrupt them:



  • Write a blog post or Reddit post mapping the scheme.

  • Use terms the scammers use + the word "scam" for SEO.

  • Submit to scam-tracking sites (e.g., ScamAdviser, Trustpilot, or Google Safe Browsing).


4. Script Detection (Advanced Option)


If you're scraping or monitoring:



  • Build a crawler that scans unlisted video IDs shared from suspicious domains.

  • Flag if the video description is empty but full of motivational nonsense + redirection links.




Final Note:


That laughable disclaimer is legal armor for snake oil - like putting a neon sign on a toxic potion saying "not FDA approved" and hoping people still drink it.


They don't care if 9/10 viewers ignore it - they only need one desperate person.


Would you like help drafting a public-facing SEO article that exposes this scam and helps people spot similar tactics?