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In the final months of 2022, online users reported seeing ads that claimed Twitter owner Elon Musk and Tesla, the company that he had been the CEO of for years, had endorsed a product named Pro...
Pro Power Saver contains cheap electrical components with no special energy saving capabilities. The few positive reviews are completely fabricated, the celebrity backers are non-existent, and the news sites are spoofed. It’s an elaborate ruse to get consumers to spend $49 on a useless device.
Several consistent markers characterize the Elon Musk Energy Saving Device Scam making it identifiable: Too-good-to-be-true claims of dramatic electricity bill reductions through vague “power stabilization” or “dirty electricity filtering” pseudoscience. Outlandish promises should raise suspicions.
Scams for these "electricity-saving boxes" usually begin with an online ad displayed on a website or in an email newsletter that claims the compact, inexpensive device can save homeowners 90% off...
After our previous investigations into the deceptive "Elon Musk Energy Saving Device Scam", "Esaver Watt Review", and "Stop Watt Elon Musk Scam", scam artists are back at it with new and equally misleading products.
US tech billionaire Elon Musk has not developed a product that can cut household energy consumption by up to 90 percent, nor has the Department of Justice sued to prevent its release, despite...
Plug-in boxes or devices that claim to lower your electricity usage and reduce your power bill are sold under many different product names, such as Miraclewatt, Stop Watt, Pro Power Saver and...