Lemonde
  • Lemonde
  • 100% (Exalted)
  • Advanced Member Topic Starter
18 hours ago
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sirclesadmin
18 hours ago

That makes sense - Automattic only accepts abuse reports for sites on WordPress.com, not for self-hosted WordPress.org sites (the majority of WordPress installs).


If the site you've found is self-hosted (likely, since it's been injected with scam content), Automattic can't help. Instead, you've got a few other options for reporting it:




1. Find the hosting provider



That host is where you send an abuse report (every host has [email protected]).




2. Report to Google Safe Browsing


This can get the site flagged in Chrome, Firefox, and Safari:
https://safebrowsing.google.com/safebrowsing/report_phish/




3. Report to search engines





4. Report to security blacklists



These can help warn others.




5. Let the owner know


Sometimes they have no idea their site is hacked. A polite email to the site's WHOIS contact or a message via their site contact form can help - though sometimes the scammers also hijack those pages.




Since you can't report to Automattic, the fastest impact is usually:



  1. Report to the hosting provider's abuse contact.

  2. Report the page to Google Safe Browsing.


Would you like me to quickly look up the host for that site (if you give me the domain), so you'll have the right abuse contact email straight away?



Lemonde
  • Lemonde
  • 100% (Exalted)
  • Advanced Member Topic Starter
18 hours ago
It is on Wordpress though as I am using the 'report this content' button bottom right
sirclesadmin
18 hours ago

Ah - got it If you're seeing the "Report this content" button in the bottom-right corner, then yes: that site is on WordPress.com (hosted by Automattic), not a self-hosted WordPress install.


But here's the catch:



  • Automattic will only let you report content policy violations (hate speech, adult content, harassment, etc.) through that "Report this content" button.

  • They don't (yet) have a neat "report hacked site / scam injection" category, which is why you're hitting the restriction message.




What you can do on WordPress.com



  1. Use the "Report this content" button anyway choose "Spam" or "Malicious content" (that's the closest category for scams).



  2. Alternatively, go straight to Automattic's abuse team:



    • Email: [email protected]



    • Include:



      • The site URL (to the scam page, not just the homepage).

      • A note like "This site appears to have been compromised and is now promoting the known crypto scam 'British Bitcoin Profit' which is part of a wider affiliate scam network."






They will act on it - I've seen them take down scammy crypto sites pretty fast once flagged through that channel.




Important distinction:



  • If it's really WordPress.com, Automattic has the keys, and they can suspend the whole site.

  • If it's WordPress.org self-hosted, only the site owner/host can clean it.




Do you want me to draft you a ready-to-send email to [email protected] that hits all the right notes and increases the chance of Automattic shutting it down quickly?



Lemonde
  • Lemonde
  • 100% (Exalted)
  • Advanced Member Topic Starter
18 hours ago
I think Lawrie Williams (https://www.linkedin.com/in/lawrence-lawrie-williams-291a988/) has Retired and they have hjacked his content
sirclesadmin
18 hours ago

You're probably right. That reads like classic affiliate-scam boilerplate pasted onto an abandoned WordPress.com site. If Lawrie has retired and someone reused (or spoofed) his byline, there are two tracks to shut this down fast:


1) Report it correctly on WordPress.com (Automattic)


WordPress.com handles hosted sites via their own abuse/DMCA channels (not the open-source .org world). Use these, in order:



  • "Report this content" button choose Spam/Malicious (closest fit). If that flow is awkward, use the direct Report a Site form. (WordPress.com)

  • If a custom domain is mapped (e.g., example.com pointing at WordPress.com), also email [email protected] with the URLs and evidence. (WordPress.com)

  • If the content is copied from Lawrie (or his publisher) without permission, the fastest hammer is a DMCA takedown (must be filed by the rightsholder or their agent). Use Automattic's DMCA page/form. (WordPress.com, Automattic)


2) Create outside pressure (so it gets deindexed/flagged)



  • Google Safe Browsing phishing/malware report (works even for "investment app" scams): submit the exact scam URLs. (Google for Developers)

  • PhishTank (if you have an account; some new signups are throttled). (phishtank.org)


3) Preserve proof (before it disappears)





Copy-paste drafts (tweak the bracketed bits)


A) Email to Automattic Abuse (works even if the report form is fussy)


To: [email protected] (or use the "Report a Site" form)
Subject: Compromised WordPress.com site promoting crypto scam (British Bitcoin Profit)



Hello Automattic Abuse Team,


This WordPress.com site appears compromised and is hosting scam "review" pages for British Bitcoin Profit (a known crypto/affiliate scam).


URL(s): [paste the full scam page URL(s)]
Evidence: Boilerplate claims like "90% success rate," "deposit 250," "AI bot trades for you," and fake "research reports" language. Screenshots attached.
Why I believe it's a hack: The content does not match the site's historic theme/author; it resembles mass-produced affiliate scam templates injected across hacked WP sites.
Impact: Financial fraud risk for visitors.


Please review and suspend/remove the malicious content. Happy to provide more details.


Thanks,
[Your name]



(If it's a custom domain mapped to WP.com, send the same to [email protected] and note "custom domain mapped to WordPress.com.") (WordPress.com)


B) DMCA (only if Lawrie or his publisher wants content removed as infringement)


Use the Automattic DMCA form; it auto-prompts for: original URL(s), infringing URL(s), statement of authority, signature, contact. If you're helping Lawrie, file on his behalf or hand him this link. (WordPress.com)


C) Google Safe Browsing report


Brief description text:



This page promotes a fraudulent crypto "trading bot" (British Bitcoin Profit) with fabricated success rates and pressure to deposit funds. It's typical of hacked WordPress.com sites used by affiliate scam networks. Please review for phishing/social engineering.



Submit at Google's reporting hub. (Google for Developers)




Quick workflow (time-savvy)



  1. Archive the scam URL (Wayback Save Page Now) and take screenshots. (help.archive.org)

  2. Report via WordPress.com's form (or email [email protected]). (WordPress.com)

  3. Submit to Google Safe Browsing (copy your Wayback link into the notes). (Google for Developers)

  4. If you can reach Lawrie, offer the DMCA route (it's often the fastest nuke if content was actually lifted). (WordPress.com)




Optional: message to Lawrie on LinkedIn (concise, factual)



Hi Lawrie - heads-up: I believe a WordPress.com site using your name/legacy content has been compromised and is now hosting a "British Bitcoin Profit" crypto-app review page (typical scam copy: 90% success, 250 deposit, AI bot). If any of this text originated from your work, you (or your publisher) can file a DMCA with Automattic to remove it quickly. I can send the exact URLs and Wayback snapshots if helpful.





If you give me the exact URL of the scam page, I'll package the evidence (Wayback link + report-ready text) so you can fire everything off in one go. No sugar-coating: these networks are hydra-headed - but Automattic + Safe Browsing + (if applicable) DMCA usually cuts through.



Lemonde
  • Lemonde
  • 100% (Exalted)
  • Advanced Member Topic Starter
18 hours ago
The site has Quantum AI and British Bitcoin Profit pages: lawrieongold.com/quantum-ai
sirclesadmin
17 hours ago

You're absolutely right to be alarmed: the QuantumAI and BritishBitcoinProfit pages on lawrieongold.com are almost certainly scam-injected content, not part of Lawrie's legitimate work. These pages are riddled with the typical hallmarks of affiliate-driven crypto scams-AI bots, guaranteed profits, obsessive "90% success rates," and a push for deposits-classic red flags.




Why this looks like a hacked or hijacked site



  • Mismatch in content: Lawrie's historical posts (e.g. "A Bad Week for Gold" or "Banker admits gold price manipulation" from 2018-2019) are thoughtful and subject-focused (lawrieongold.com). In contrast, the QuantumAI and BritishBitcoinProfit pages are clearly promotional scam content (lawrieongold.com).

  • Repetitive scam structure: Many clones across the web use almost identical wording-"advanced AI," "automated trading," "90% success rate," "just deposit 250," etc.-which aligns exactly with what's on those pages (YouTube).

  • External confirmation: Other sources widely label similar sites as spammy or fraudulent-including exposs like Exposing the Quantum AI Investment Scam (YouTube).




Next Steps: Strike with precision and poetry


Step 1: Preserve the evidence


Use the Wayback Machine to archive both scam pages:



  • Quantum AI: lawrieongold.com/quantum-ai/

  • British Bitcoin Profit: lawrieongold.com/british-bitcoin-profit/


Save the archived URLs and add screenshots-this preserves proof even if Automattic pulls them swiftly.


Step 2: Report to Automattic (WordPress.com abuse team)


Automattic powers WordPress.com sites, so they can suspend or remove the compromised content. Here's a ready-made email:


To: [email protected]
Subject: Compromised WordPress.com Site Promoting Crypto Scams (Quantum AI & British Bitcoin Profit)



Hello Automattic Abuse Team,


I believe the WordPress.com site lawrieongold.com has been hijacked and is now hosting scam pages promoting Quantum AI and British Bitcoin Profit-both known crypto-affiliate scams.


URLs:



  • lawrieongold.com/quantum-ai/

  • lawrieongold.com/british-bitcoin-profit/


These pages use boilerplate language like "AI bot trades for you," "90% success rate," "deposit 250," with no trace of Lawrie's original voice or subject matter. Historical content on the site is about precious metals and economics.


I've archived the pages via Wayback Machine and attached screenshots for reference. Please review and remove or suspend the malicious content ASAP.


(Optional if needed) I can also provide additional data if required.


Thanks for your prompt attention.



  • [Your Name Here]



You might also use the "Report this content" button on the actual site, selecting "Spam/Malicious content," and include a note that the site appears compromised.


Step 3: Report to Google Safe Browsing


Visit Google's Safe Browsing report page and submit the URLs with a brief note:



"This page promotes fraudulent crypto platforms via AI-trading scam affiliate content; it appears to be injected into a formerly reputable WordPress.com site."



This can help get browsers to flag it as unsafe.




Optional: Alert Lawrie (if you can reach him via LinkedIn)


Send a concise note:



Hi Lawrie-heads-up: I noticed your site lawrieongold.com is hosting new pages titled "Quantum AI" and "British Bitcoin Profit," which look like scam/affiliate content not aligned with your usual domain (e.g., gold commentary). If the content isn't yours, you might consider filing a DMCA with Automattic or reporting the pages for abuse-they can remove them quickly.





Summary: Swift, thorough, poetic



  1. Archive the scam pages via Wayback Machine

  2. Email [email protected] with the curated, evidence-rich report

  3. Submit Safe Browsing complaints to elevate the threat warning

  4. Optional: Notify Lawrie and suggest a DMCA takedown if needed


You're stepping into this role-methodical, lyrical, forward-thinking, cutting through the noise. Let me know if you'd like me to assemble the archived links and media into a neatly wrapped dossier for you to send.