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Betting Fraud Scheme Exposed: How Scammers Fake Sports Predictions

0h 08m video Published Jun 7, 2017 Transcribed Jul 11, 2026 O overbafer1
Beginner 4 min read For: General audience interested in online scams and betting fraud awareness.
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πŸ“ˆ Moderate

AI Summary

This video exposes a betting fraud scheme where scammers use a password-protected archive to fake sports predictions. The program generates archives with pre-written results, each assigned a unique password. After a match ends, the scammer provides the password matching the actual score, tricking victims into believing the predictions are real. The creator warns viewers not to fall for such scams and advises against buying sports forecasts.

[00:08]
Warning about betting fraud

The video is a warning about a fraud scheme related to betting, not a guide. It aims to prevent viewers from becoming victims.

[00:22]
Target audience

Scammers target people who place bets and buy sports predictions.

[00:39]
Program demonstration

The scammer shows a program that generates fake prediction archives. It has fields for match number, link, and teams.

[01:21]
Creating a fake archive

The scammer searches for a football match (Ukraine vs Malta) and creates an archive that appears legitimate but contains an .exe file.

[02:04]
Scam scenario

The scammer contacts a victim via VKontakte, offers a free prediction, and sends a password-protected archive. After the match, the scammer provides the password that matches the actual score.

[03:43]
Victim verification

The victim unzips the archive and sees the correct result, convincing them the predictions are accurate.

[04:10]
How the scam works

The program generates multiple results with unique passwords. The scammer can provide any password to match the actual outcome without changing the archive.

[05:03]
Technical analysis

Using 7-Zip, the creator reveals that the archive contains a text file with all possible results pre-written. Each result corresponds to a password.

[06:40]
Final warning

The creator advises against buying sports forecasts, arguing that if someone had guaranteed wins, they would bet themselves instead of selling predictions.

[07:09]
Example of a scammer

A YouTuber named Suleman sells expensive sports predictions, claiming to win big. The creator questions the legitimacy of such services.

The video demonstrates a simple but effective scam where fake predictions are generated after the fact. The creator urges viewers to be skeptical of anyone selling guaranteed sports bets.

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"Title accurately describes the content: a fraud scheme related to betting."

Mentioned in this Video

Study Flashcards (7)

What type of scam is demonstrated in the video?

easy Click to reveal answer

A betting fraud scheme where scammers use password-protected archives to fake sports predictions.

00:08

What does the program generate?

easy Click to reveal answer

It generates password-protected archives containing pre-written match results.

02:04

How does the scammer convince the victim?

medium Click to reveal answer

After the match, the scammer provides the password that matches the actual score, making the prediction appear correct.

03:43

What tool did the creator use to analyze the archive?

easy Click to reveal answer

7-Zip.

05:03

What did the creator find inside the archive?

medium Click to reveal answer

A text file containing all possible results pre-written, each corresponding to a password.

05:31

Why does the creator advise against buying sports forecasts?

medium Click to reveal answer

Because if someone had guaranteed wins, they would bet themselves instead of selling predictions.

06:40

What is the name of the YouTuber mentioned who sells predictions?

hard Click to reveal answer

Suleman.

07:09

πŸ’‘ Key Takeaways

πŸ’‘

Warning about betting fraud

Sets the context and purpose of the video as a cautionary tale.

00:08
πŸ”§

Scam scenario explained

Illustrates the step-by-step deception process.

02:04
πŸ“Š

Technical analysis reveals scam

Shows how the archive contains all possible results, proving the fraud.

05:03
βš–οΈ

Logical argument against buying predictions

Provides a simple reasoning to avoid such scams.

06:40

βœ‚οΈ Creator Tools: Viral Hooks

AI-generated clip ideas for Shorts based on the transcript

No viral clips found for this video, or they are still being generated.

[00:08] today's video will be a fraud scheme related to betting this is not a guide they are an instructive video I just want to warn you and caution you from what you will see today so that you do not become a victim of scammers because it

[00:22] seems to me that among my listeners there are those who place bets and where they place bets there are those who buy sports predictions for these same bets and where the predictions are there are certainly those who like to deceive such people but

[00:39] today I will show you how such bad people are trying to profit from you people who buy bets in general I finally got this program look at it here I kind of opened it we have these

[00:53] lines here number link to the match who is playing well the number here can be indicated for example the match number or probably the client number or whatever was meant here I can't understand the link to the match but in principle it is clear

[01:08] that there is no need to comment on anything here and of course the column who is playing here you can write, say, Russia vs In Belarus, well, nothing like that, and also others with a button, let's now just type in

[01:21] Google who plays football, go to the first link so no one thinks that this is a paid advertisement, but let's also write Ukraine Malta, this is probably everything that has already played, in short, everyone Ukraine Malta, we call our

[01:36] match that way, and now we click create archive, we get an archive in this folder, and when we open this archive, we see that it seems to belong to Winrar, there are no jambs here that indicate that in fact this is not an

[01:49] archive, but the victim thinks that it is an archive, and of course, the .exe extension, but an archive also exists for this, well, what to do next, now let me tell you this program can

[02:04] generate ready-made events, that is, let's imagine a situation: I main machine and from the virtual machine they transfer this file

[02:16] to their machine, the main machine is the victim and the virtual machine is our scammer, and so I, let's say, went to some VKontakte group, found a person and said that I have a 100 % prediction for today's game, and by

[02:32] giving you your first bet, I'll provide it for free after you're convinced that the bet will actually win. You 'll buy it from me in the future. Let's say we found someone who agreed to our terms. We

[02:46] provide him with this archive, so we have it here. Now he's watching football results. He saw that Ukraine lost to Malta, and now he says, "Please give me this archive sometimes so

[03:02] I can make sure you're not telling the truth." He can't unpack this archive because it requires a password, and to be honest, I don't even know the password myself. But since I'm acting as a fraudster in this situation,

[03:14] I'll take the following path. It's very interesting to deceive yourself. This video has a split personality. Since I've already created the Ukraine- Malta archive, I now need to keep track of the exact score. That is,

[03:29] Ukraine had 0 points, and Malta had one point. After that, I click " one point. After that, I click " save result," and I have this very long password, which I provide to the victim. So that he

[03:43] provide to the victim. So that he unzips this archive and he gets a text document, opening which you can see that the results are exactly the same as they were on this site, and you can make absolutely

[03:57] site, and you can make absolutely any game, not only football, tennis, and golf, and what else people of yours play and I don’t even know, and a person looking at such an accurate result will most likely become interested and

[04:10] transfer money to a scammer, and after which he will simply be thrown, well, now I again go to the virtual machine here indicating from, say, 99, barely, while

[04:22] I do not change the archive data, but simply click save the result and copy this password, after that I go to another folder and unzip this archive that I made from the very beginning, open the text document and see

[04:36] that we have a result of 299, that is, the program creates an imaginary archive in that is, the program creates an imaginary archive in which there are a number of ready-made results and each result is assigned its own individual password, that is, if I

[04:48] indicate some other number here, say 98, a password of this type will be generated, and the first part sometimes remains unchanged, but the second part changes, please note Attention, I'll put a zero here, but up to

[05:03] this value, nothing changes here, 689, and this fact interested me. I decided to unpack this archive using the 7zip archiver and see what's in it. Right-click

[05:18] it. Right-click 7-zip and click open archive. Here we see this folder. There are a lot of files, but I was interested in this folder specifically. There will be a text document. I found it, it's called text.

[05:31] This is very banal. Now let's look inside this archive. We found a text file in which all the existing ones were already indicated in advance, that is, look, we take the unchanged part, copy it from here and

[05:46] go to our text editor, click find and find the password. This value is responsible for the number 1. Let's make the score 12 now, absolutely not having it sometimes,

[05:58] but having just this text editor, I click unpack this archive. Your initial part of the password and now you need to make up another part of the password. Since we have passwords in total, there can only be 200 with certain results,

[06:12] then let's say this number is approximately this will be the result 14, something like this. we open this archive but the result is 13 I wasn't entirely accurate here we just have extra

[06:27] lines so I didn't tell you the result quite correctly well in short I think you already understood the gist I can't give you this program because it is tied to a computer and I took it only exclusively to

[06:40] demonstrate to you so that you don't fall for such scams from scammers and to be honest I do n't understand at all why people buy n't understand at all why people buy ready-made sports forecasts because if

[06:53] I knew ready-made forecasts for any sport I wouldn't sell it to anyone I would mortgage all my property go make a 100% bet and win think for yourself who will sell it and in general somehow when I was recording yesterday's

[07:09] video about these companies I came across one channel of some nobody dude, I think his last name is Suleman or something he just says ask bookmakers and he created his own website says some millionaire created his website and

[07:24] there he sells sports forecasts and the minimum such service seems to cost him 20,000 rubles The maximum is 120, but this seems to be a paid subscription. The point is that he demonstratively shows how he takes a big jackpot and

[07:40] cash from bookmakers, thereby encouraging people to buy the same bets from him. Do n't you think that all this could be planned in advance? Well,

[07:52] but I wouldn't fucking risk it, just think about who would sell a 100% result. I'm not saying that the guy is deceiving you, it's just that, given the mentality of our people in the post-Soviet

[08:06] space, I reason exactly like this. In short, that's not the point. In general, if you liked the video, then give it a thumbs up and subscribe to this channel. Rama Dark Web. I would like to express my deep gratitude for the provided software, but

[08:20] now I will be forced and it's tiring. It's just not a very honest It's just not a very honest program.

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