close

Hucksters.net

Review Hucksters.net on TrustPilot the web’s most corrupt ratings!

Hucksters.net
Exposing spam, fraud, corruption, censorship, and propaganda

Brian Jackson

A.k.a. Brian Lee Jackson
Grifter, Web Developer / Male / Center-Right

Brian Jackson is a center-right Grifter and Web Developer who is a citizen of United States, and has been associated with the following entities as either a significant contributor, participant, promoter, or beneficiary, according to our OSINT research:

Brands: ,

Groups:

Events:

Domains: , , ,

Education:
Subreddits:

Google Adsense:

Google Analytics:

Google Analytics (2):

Google Analytics (3):

Google Analytics (4):

Google Analytics (5):

Google Analytics (6):

Google Analytics (7):

Google Analytics (8):

Google Analytics (9):

Google Tag Manager:

Google Tag Manager (2):

Google Tag Manager (3):

Google Tag Manager (4):

Google Tag Manager (5):



Public references:

LittleBizzy is a small, independent business. We do not have thousands of dollars to spend on attorneys every single time someone tries to harass, defame, or extort our company. Likewise, we have grown tired of the incessant email spam, consumer fraud, and quid-pro-quo culture that has taken over the WordPress and online marketing communities. We feel obligated to add such entities to a public Scammers Directory until the behavior stops. While some of these individuals might claim to have been our customers in an attempt to hurt our reputation, the truth is that none of them were ever our customers, who are protected by our strict Privacy Policy. Our goal in publishing this information is to expose and publicly document their ongoing misdeeds in preparation for potential future legal action, and/or to discourage such unethical behavior in the future. Note: Complies with all U.S. and E.U. laws, including GDPR Erasure.

Category: Theft, Fraud

Update 5/17/2019: Kinsta associate Alex Panagis is now trying to actively hack into LittleBizzy.com

Update: The Kinsta gang (Panagis and Jackson) have now asked several of their Wikipedia “friends” to login and vote “DELETE” on our Wikipedia page. According to our server logs, most of these Wikipedia users are based in the United States, and likely part of Jackson’s corrupt IM/Warrior Forum/SEO fraud gang. A few of the users are also from places like Philippines and Iran with zero posting history on Wikipedia, suggesting that they’ve either been “coaxed” or perhaps paid as freelancers to attack LittleBizzy. Such a high number of newbie users started editing the page that one of the top Wikipedia editors finally had to add a warning explaining to all the first time participants that it’s not a majority-vote process. Wiki handles involved include:

Praxidicae, Waggie, Epinoia, HighKing, Alex-h, Oshawott_12

If you came here because someone asked you to, or you read a message on another website, please note that this is not a majority vote, but instead a discussion among Wikipedia contributors. Wikipedia has policies and guidelines regarding the encyclopedia’s content, and consensus (agreement) is gauged based on the merits of the arguments, not by counting votes.

This is the most definitive evidence to date of Jackson’s blatant fraud that he implements across several websites as part of his “marketing” work on behalf of Kinsta web hosting, KeyCDN, and other clients.

Update: Jackson and/or his little guy Panagis are now apparently emailing dozens of websites trying to get them not to mention our free plugins and trying to sabotage our backlinks (go ahead, kids, we don’t need them). It might take them a while, since 300,000+ websites are using our software already. Pathetic, juvenile, and illegal, that the type of behavior you get from Brian Jackson and Alex Panagis.

Update: Apparently Jackson is now attempting to force Wikipedia to delete our company’s page in an attempt to hurt our SEO after his little pal Alex Panagis came running asking for help in attacking LittleBizzy…

Blatantly stole code from our Disable Cart Fragments (Speed Demon) open source WordPress plugin, licensed under the GPL which legally requires attribution, and bundled it into his premium Perfmatters plugin. For several years, has somehow duped both Kinsta web hosting and KeyCDN into letting him turn their company blogs into part of his gray-hat PBN (Private Blog Network) to embed several backlinks to his sales page for Perfmatters, without the legally required FCC disclaimers, apparently without their understanding of what he was doing.

Jackson has a history of blatant consumer fraud, previously launching multiple WordPress related blogs with several fake “reviews” of his own products, without any FCC or other form of disclosure that he was the owner and promoter of these products, in classic “Warrior Forum” style.

Apparently he’s teaching his ways of fraud to his new protege, Mr. Alex Panagis.

Associates: Alex Panagis

Brian Jackson
“Chief Marketing Officer” at Kinsta
Scottsdale, Arizona

Public references:
https://woorkup.com
https://perfmatters.io
http://archive.fo/2WMle
http://archive.is/8T1k2
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Praxidicae
https://brianjackson.io

https://www.linkedin.com/in/brianleejackson
http://archive.is/KxXV7

http://archive.is/dQeOZ
https://archive.fo/YTFMH

======

from Kinsta page bizzy

Offshore corporation registered in Switzerland that knowingly breaks consumer fraud laws in the U.S. and Europe on a mass scale.

After Brian Jackson joined their team, the fraud took off — Jackson’s specialty. Time and time again, Jackson publicly endorses his SEO clients’ services without any acknowledgement that he is being paid to advertise for them. He does it not only for Kinsta, but for past clients like KeyCDN as well as his personal projects like PerfMatters, which in part uses stolen code snippets from our free Speed Demon plugin (thanks to WP Engine and WP Rocket for crediting us!).

Jackson has paid teams from India to spam Quora as well. Not every case is fraudulent, because anyone is allowed to “ask” questions. But it does go to show that Jackson has a history of hiring Indians to spam, which has also lead him to partner with Indian spammers that cross the line.

Kinsta spam posted by Indians on Quora:
http://archive.is/advYJ
http://archive.is/QP9Dx
http://archive.is/1gLKt
http://archive.is/IDllC
http://archive.is/HhXgz
http://archive.is/kN1Ox
http://archive.is/VBUha

Public references:
http://archive.is/dQeOZ
http://archive.is/YTFMH
http://archive.is/yc4Mx



Review this person (edit or delete anytime):

One thought on "Brian Jackson"

  1. Chief Exposer says:

    Blatantly stole code from our Disable Cart Fragments (Speed Demon) open source WordPress plugin, licensed under the GPL which legally requires attribution, and bundled it into his premium Perfmatters plugin. For several years, has somehow duped both Kinsta web hosting and KeyCDN into letting him turn their company blogs into part of his gray-hat PBN (Private Blog Network) to embed several backlinks to his sales page for Perfmatters, without the legally required FCC disclaimers, apparently without their understanding of what he was doing.

    Jackson has a history of blatant consumer fraud, previously launching multiple WordPress related blogs with several fake “reviews” of his own products, without any FCC or other form of disclosure that he was the owner and promoter of these products, in classic “Warrior Forum” style.

    Apparently he’s teaching his ways of fraud to his new protege, Mr. Alex Panagis.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

*The vast majority of people listed in this database are just “normal” business people, therefore no negative connotation is insinuated nor should misdeeds be assumed based on existing in our business directory. Our underlying goal is exposing misdeeds and fraud, but to accomplish this we often must first identity “honest” business people. This is because of things like similar names, impersonation, copyright infringement, and other reasons. Thus, the vast majority of people in our database are not being accused of anything shady. For this reason, profiles are now “noindexed” by default until comments exist on any given profile, since many of them are unnotable.

DISCLAIMER: ALL INFORMATION ON THIS WEBSITE WAS OBTAINED LEGALLY VIA PUBLIC RECORDS AND WEB PAGES. This public interest website functions as a transparency engine to expose relationships between individuals and entities (e.g. brands and organizations). Under no circumstances do we publish confidential data about an individual such as ID numbers, medical records, health status, or financial information, including contact details such as personal email addresses and phone numbers, residential addresses, or personal media (e.g. photos/videos). If you discover any such information on our website (including in public comments or reviews), please let us know so that it can be removed immediately. (This does not apply to business-related phone/email, office locations, or other contact information that was used as part of a spam/fraud/etc campaign.) We explicity discourage using this internet directory in any effort to harm or harass any individual or entity, regardless of the reason. We also do not accept or solicit payments or other forms of value in exchange for removing or altering pages that are published here. Anyone is allowed to register a free account on Hucksters.net and publish reviews at anytime, as long as they use their real name and abide by our Terms, as well as all relevant laws of the United States and any local jurisdictions. Reviews can be edited or deleted at anytime at the discretion of the review author, and we strongly encourage updating the content whenever appropriate (e.g. if no longer accurate, or if new information exists). Users are also allowed to review themselves. Any comments that do not include the author’s full (real) name will be deleted. By posting on this site (under your real name), you therefore take legal responsibility for your words, and you understand that other people might therefore choose to dispute the nature of your words in a relevant court of law (thus commenters shall not hide behind Section 230). Reviews should be relevant to the subject’s career and not mundane/personal events. We encourage honesty, humility, and good humor, whenever possible.

Common searches: owner, founder, ceo, boss, associate, whois, info, huckster, scammer, spammer, liar, true, reviews, experiences, reputation, before, known for, profile, deadname, real name, birth name, original name, who was, gender, beliefs, history, etc.

Be brave! Login now and report any spam, fraud, or censorship you have witnessed. If you don’t say something, then nothing changes.

Legal caution: we fight (and expose) all fraudulent DMCA+ takedown notices submitted against our website. Any agency, freelancer, or lawyer who is party to “takedown” fraud will be aggressively exposed by our team. Please do not assist the scumbags in our directory unless you’re willing to be publicly exposed, thank you.