This cybersecurity investigation reveals a complex scam campaign centered around the domain asknebula.com, which has been co-reported alongside four distinct financial services companies across multiple consumer complaints. The domain asknebula.com was registered on February 9, 2021, through 101domain.com and has established connections to Credit Corp Solutions Inc., ACCESS GROUP INC., ACCOUNT SERVICES INC., and The Money Company through shared reporting patterns.
Credit Corp Solutions Inc., a debt collection company, represents the most significant consumer impact with 2,734 complaints filed with the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB). This entity shows a reported-together relationship with asknebula.com at a 0.50 confidence level. ACCESS GROUP INC., operating in the student loan industry, has generated 149 CFPB complaints and maintains a 0.35 confidence connection to the suspicious domain. Two additional companies complete this network: ACCOUNT SERVICES INC., another debt collection operation with 8 CFPB complaints (0.50 confidence connection), and The Money Company, a payday loan business with 2 CFPB complaints (0.35 confidence connection).
Community reports indicate unauthorized financial transactions targeting consumers through various payment methods. Multiple victims have reported suspicious charges ranging from $1 to $49.99 appearing on their credit cards and PayPal accounts, often linked to entities like "Healing 5CFN" and "YOLO Brothers Inc." One highly upvoted community report with 437 votes suggests sophisticated social engineering tactics are being employed in this campaign, though specific details require further investigation to verify the connection to the primary cluster.
To protect yourself from this campaign, consumers should immediately verify any communication claiming to be from debt collectors, student loan servicers, or payday loan companies by independently contacting these organizations through official channels listed on their legitimate websites or billing statements. Never click links in unsolicited emails or text messages, and hang up immediately on suspicious calls claiming urgent financial matters. If contacted by any entities in this network or if you notice unauthorized charges, report the incident to the Federal Trade Commission at reportfraud.ftc.gov or file a complaint with the FCC. Before engaging with any financial services communication, verify phone numbers and domains through official consumer protection databases or by searching for scam reports online.
This campaign represents a moderate to high threat level given the substantial complaint volume against Credit Corp Solutions Inc. and the coordinated use of multiple company identities alongside a central domain infrastructure. Consumers should remain vigilant for unauthorized charges, particularly small initial amounts that may precede larger fraudulent transactions, and monitor all financial accounts closely for suspicious activity related to these entities.