Scam Detective
Domain

thebalance.com

First seen Mar 1, 2026

Suspicious
  • No SSL certificate
  • 2 community reports from users

Campaign Intelligence

This cluster centers on 3 connected domains identified through shared infrastructure and registration patterns. The domains include pinktruth.com, thebalance.com, ellebeaublog.com. This campaign was identified through automated analysis of threat intelligence feeds and entity relationship mapping.

Details

Registrar
MarkMonitor, Inc.
Registration Date
7/19/2004
First Seen
3/1/2026

Related Domains

Community Reports

High school acquaintance adds me to her LipSense Facebook page, and this is my post on her wall before I blocked her. How did I do? I posted the below to her page's wall, and then messaged her with it in case it didn't post. It seems like she might have just launched her "business," so I wanted to get in early. I'm a bit sad because she's a very intelligent person and wasn't someone I'd expect to be roped into this kind of thing, isn't a housewife -- in fact she's a self-earning musician who should know better what it means to run a business. My post: I advise you as one intelligent person to another not to get roped into a money-losing MLM if you can avoid it. Take an example from the people desperate to get out of LulaRoe right now, a company with a similar business structure to LipSense. Also, you might want to check out Elle Beau's first-hand experience with Younique, which has an indistinguishable model from LipSense: https://ellebeaublog.com/poonique/ Also note that though you were instructed by your upline(s) to add your FB friends to a page for your "business," it is generally not cool to add a bunch of people to a page marketing some other company's stuff. It's treating friends and family like cash cows. MLMs center their business model on monetizing personal relationships and, whatever your morals might me, I hope you agree that treating friends and family like walking business opportunities is wrong and will likely put a strain on your relationships. I hope you are able to get out of this scam before losing too much money. 95% of consultants drop out of MLMs after 10 years while only 64% of legitimate small businesses fail in the same time period: https://www.thebalance.com/the-likelihood-of-mlm-success-1794500 99% of people lose money in an MLM: http://www.pinktruth.com/mary-kay-facts/myth-of-mlm-income-opportunity-99-lose-money-in-mlm/ John Oliver's exposé on MLMs is also very eye-opening: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s6MwGeOm8iI Get out whi

3156 days ago159 upvotes

High school acquaintance adds me to her LipSense Facebook page, and this is my post on her wall before I blocked her. How did I do? I posted the below to her page's wall, and then messaged her with it in case it didn't post. It seems like she might have just launched her "business," so I wanted to get in early. I'm a bit sad because she's a very intelligent person and wasn't someone I'd expect to be roped into this kind of thing, isn't a housewife -- in fact she's a self-earning musician who should know better what it means to run a business. My post: I advise you as one intelligent person to another not to get roped into a money-losing MLM if you can avoid it. Take an example from the people desperate to get out of LulaRoe right now, a company with a similar business structure to LipSense. Also, you might want to check out Elle Beau's first-hand experience with Younique, which has an indistinguishable model from LipSense: https://ellebeaublog.com/poonique/ Also note that though you were instructed by your upline(s) to add your FB friends to a page for your "business," it is generally not cool to add a bunch of people to a page marketing some other company's stuff. It's treating friends and family like cash cows. MLMs center their business model on monetizing personal relationships and, whatever your morals might me, I hope you agree that treating friends and family like walking business opportunities is wrong and will likely put a strain on your relationships. I hope you are able to get out of this scam before losing too much money. 95% of consultants drop out of MLMs after 10 years while only 64% of legitimate small businesses fail in the same time period: https://www.thebalance.com/the-likelihood-of-mlm-success-1794500 99% of people lose money in an MLM: http://www.pinktruth.com/mary-kay-facts/myth-of-mlm-income-opportunity-99-lose-money-in-mlm/ John Oliver's exposé on MLMs is also very eye-opening: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s6MwGeOm8iI Get out whi

3156 days ago159 upvotes

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