Scam Detective
Domain

vemma.com

First seen Feb 22, 2026

Suspicious
  • No SSL certificate
  • 2 community reports from users
Showing the 4 highest-risk connections; 5,422 more in this cluster. Each line is a "campaign co-member" relationship.

Campaign Intelligence

Scam Campaign Report: Multi-Vector Financial and Malware Threat Cluster Consumer Protection Intelligence Report This report documents a cluster of 5,789 connected entities involved in a broad, multi-vector fraud and malware campaign targeting consumers across the United States and internationally. The cluster includes 1,271 phone numbers, 2,957 domains, 143 companies, and 281 email addresses, interconnected through 17 confirmed cross-entity relationships. The campaign appears to operate across ...

Scam Campaign Report: Multi-Vector Financial Fraud and Malware Infrastructure Cluster This report documents a cluster of 4,628 connected entities identified through cross-referencing complaint databases, threat intelligence feeds, and community reporting. The cluster spans 1,295 phone numbers, 2,559 domains and IP addresses, 160 companies, and 252 email addresses. While the individual phone numbers in this cluster each carry zero FTC complaints at this time, the broader infrastructure surroundi...

Scam Campaign Intelligence Report: Multi-Vector Financial and Malware Threat Cluster This report covers a cluster of 4,263 connected entities identified through aggregated complaint data, infrastructure analysis, and community reporting. The cluster encompasses 1,055 phone numbers, 2,451 domains and IP addresses, 146 companies, and 252 email addresses, forming one of the more complex mixed-threat groupings analyzed for consumer protection purposes. The campaign appears to exploit consumer famil...

Scam Campaign Report: Multi-Vector Financial Fraud and Infrastructure Cluster This report covers a cluster of 3,157 connected entities identified through shared reporting, co-appearance in consumer complaints, and cross-domain infrastructure linkages. The campaign spans 1,314 phone numbers, 1,486 domains, 170 companies, and 187 email addresses, with 16 documented cross-entity relationships. The cluster appears to blend legitimate financial institution impersonation with fraudulent domains, susp...

Scam Campaign Report: Multi-Vector Fraud and Malware Cluster (3,955 Connected Entities) This report documents a large and technically sophisticated scam campaign comprising 3,955 connected entities, including 651 phone numbers, 2,107 flagged domains and IP addresses, and 182 associated email addresses. The campaign spans multiple fraud categories, combining impersonation-based telephone scams, malware distribution infrastructure, phishing email operations, and consumer fraud documented across c...

Scam Campaign Analysis Report: Multi-Vector Fraud and Malware Cluster (3,969 Connected Entities) Investigators have identified a sprawling cluster of 3,969 connected entities operating across phone, email, and web-based infrastructure, comprising 651 phone numbers, 2,121 domains and IP addresses, and 182 email addresses. The campaign spans multiple fraud categories including impersonation calls, malware distribution, botnet operations, and overpayment scams. The most prominently documented phon...

Scam Campaign Report: Multi-Vector Fraud Network Involving Impersonation Calls, Malware Infrastructure, and Online Vehicle Purchase Fraud This report covers a cluster of 3,426 connected entities, including 619 phone numbers, 1,630 domains, and 181 email addresses, tied to a broad and technically sophisticated fraud campaign. The campaign combines government and business impersonation robocalls, malware distribution infrastructure, and consumer-facing vehicle purchase scams. The scale and divers...

Scam Campaign Report: Multi-Vector Fraud and Malware Network (Cluster of 3,989 Connected Entities) This report documents a large-scale fraud and malware campaign identified through a cluster of 3,989 connected entities, including 651 phone numbers, 2,141 domains and IP addresses, and 182 email addresses. The campaign operates across multiple attack surfaces simultaneously, combining impersonation phone calls, malware-laced infrastructure, and deceptive email outreach to target consumers across ...

This cluster centers on 5 connected domains identified through shared infrastructure and registration patterns. The domains include yprpariah.wordpress.com, www.statepress.com, www.truthinadvertising.org, www.vemma.com, ign.com. Do not click links to any of the flagged domains. If you have visited one, check your accounts for unauthorized activity and consider changing your passwords. You can report suspicious contacts to the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov or to the FCC at consumercomplaints.fcc.go...

This cluster centers on 6 connected domains identified through shared infrastructure and registration patterns. The domains include kolotv.com, yprpariah.wordpress.com, statepress.com, truthinadvertising.org, vemma.com, ign.com. Do not click links to any of the flagged domains. If you have visited one, check your accounts for unauthorized activity and consider changing your passwords. You can report suspicious contacts to the FTC at reportfraud.ftc.gov or to the FCC at consumercomplaints.fcc.go...

Details

Registrar
GoDaddy.com, LLC
Registration Date
2/27/2004
First Seen
2/22/2026

Related Domains

Community Reports

Vemma is a pyramid scheme! I don't know how many of you have heard of Vemma. It's a pyramid scheme. I can find many MANY sources online that say it's just a scam. My friend has been suckered into their lies. First, you have to buy stuff from them to be an official member. Second, you have recruit other people so that you'll make money. They claim they aren't selling their products, but advertising by word of mouth. My friend wants to be rich, and he thinks he will be. Every time I drank any of their products, my stomach hurt, and I felt nauseous. I thought it was a coincidence because I do have stomach problems. They seem to only be targeting teens/young adults. It's too good to be true. They claim to have an A+ rating with the BBB, they really only have a C+. Dr. Oz did actually have one of their products on his show, but is he actually credible? Vemma donates BIG MONEY to one of his charities. " Boreyko is an advisory board member of Oz’s charity, HealthCorps, and Vemma has been very supportive, to the tune of $650,000 in donations to the charity. “I’m sure Vemma is a favorite company of Dr. Oz because of its generosity,’’ said Oz spokesman Tim Sullivan." They have this saying that the reason why people are so poor, is because all they've ever listened, and taken advice from is from poor people. I told my friend that of course people higher up in the company are giving them all advice, because they are the ones making money off all of those kids involved. All of the people involved buy the products. They're brain washing them, and doing a good job. http://www.vemma.com/ http://www.bbb.org/central-northern-western-arizona/business-reviews/multi-level-selling-companies/vemma-nutrition-company-in-scottsdale-az-97004349/ https://www.truthinadvertising.org/pyramid-scheme-expert-issues-warning-vemma/ https://www.truthinadvertising.org/eight-things-you-should-know-about-vemma/ http://www.statepress.com/2013/04/10/vemma-scam-or-business-opportunity/ http:

4561 days ago9 upvotes

Vemma is a pyramid scheme! I don't know how many of you have heard of Vemma. It's a pyramid scheme. I can find many MANY sources online that say it's just a scam. My friend has been suckered into their lies. First, you have to buy stuff from them to be an official member. Second, you have recruit other people so that you'll make money. They claim they aren't selling their products, but advertising by word of mouth. My friend wants to be rich, and he thinks he will be. Every time I drank any of their products, my stomach hurt, and I felt nauseous. I thought it was a coincidence because I do have stomach problems. They seem to only be targeting teens/young adults. It's too good to be true. They claim to have an A+ rating with the BBB, they really only have a C+. Dr. Oz did actually have one of their products on his show, but is he actually credible? Vemma donates BIG MONEY to one of his charities. " Boreyko is an advisory board member of Oz’s charity, HealthCorps, and Vemma has been very supportive, to the tune of $650,000 in donations to the charity. “I’m sure Vemma is a favorite company of Dr. Oz because of its generosity,’’ said Oz spokesman Tim Sullivan." They have this saying that the reason why people are so poor, is because all they've ever listened, and taken advice from is from poor people. I told my friend that of course people higher up in the company are giving them all advice, because they are the ones making money off all of those kids involved. All of the people involved buy the products. They're brain washing them, and doing a good job. http://www.vemma.com/ http://www.bbb.org/central-northern-western-arizona/business-reviews/multi-level-selling-companies/vemma-nutrition-company-in-scottsdale-az-97004349/ https://www.truthinadvertising.org/pyramid-scheme-expert-issues-warning-vemma/ https://www.truthinadvertising.org/eight-things-you-should-know-about-vemma/ http://www.statepress.com/2013/04/10/vemma-scam-or-business-opportunity/ http:

4561 days ago9 upvotes

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