ClickOut Media

ClickOut Media group seem to be what Finixio have re-branded as. They have moved from London to Malta, presumably to avoid prosecution in UK or European courts, and have changed their name, but people I was following on LinkedIn Seem to have magically moved from one to the other.

Clickout Media Directors in Malta

Not many of the staff seem to work in an office, they mainly seem to work from home and are stationed in their own country, unwittingly deceiving and defrauding their own people. 

They now claim to be a legitimate company in Malta and they probably are registered there as Finixio were really registered in the UK. We can see that there is a direct link between the naming/branding here from companies that these people were setting up, before the move to Malta:

Tony Ta

jinder DHANJAL is a name that can be found on the official documents for Finixio where Adam Robert Grunwerg can still be found:

Adam Robert Grunwerg

Adam Grunwerg has now teamed up with Alan Attard, reportedly a native of Malta, with whom he is now registering the ClickOut group.

Much of Finixio's strategy has been brought over to the new group, with the usual system of using low cost journalists to populate fake review sites with meaningless opinions on cryptocurrency whilst advertising gambling and trading scams between each item. The real journalists are not credited with their articles, and instead they use fake names with stock photos to emulate real people  so that they can keep using the same authors even after their sites have been discredited and removed.

 Alan Grunwerg and Alan Attard, directors of the ClickOut Media Ltd Company in Malta

I poked around - there is credible evidence and allegation that ClickOut Media and Finixio are deeply entwined, the creators of both do appear to have recreated a  "rebrand" (in the strict legal sense) by merging or repositioning of the same affiliate / SEO infrastructure under new names.


What the public evidence suggests

Here's a distilled breakdown of what I found linking Finixio and ClickOut Media:

Evidence What is it What it suggests
ClickOut.com Affiliate Network ClickOut markets itself as a "leading affiliate marketing network in the crypto & iGaming industry" with CPL, CPA, etc. (Home - Clickout LTD) This is precisely the domain that such "AI-trading / crypto app" scams use (affiliate funnels), so ClickOut is operating at the kind of business level Finixio is accused of.
Investigative reports / exposes Articles claim that Finixio and ClickOut Media jointly control SEO, crypto presales, domain acquisitions, and redirect / parasite SEO tactics. (The Holy Coins) These are not proofs in court, but they align with repeated patterns in your "Scam or Legit?" investigations.
Former tech / content sites pivoted Sites like ReadWrite have reportedly been acquired, then pivoted to heavy crypto / gambling content under new structures. (recleudo.com) That kind of pivot is a known trick: take inbound links / domain authority, then retarget them for monetized verticals.
Forum & industry chatter In affiliate / SEO forums, people allege that Finixio / ClickOut make $40-50M/month from iGaming SEO traffic, use redirect chains, drop domains, etc. (affiliateguarddog.com) That's not proof, but it's consistent with what whistleblowers and insiders often reveal about big affiliate schemes.
Statements by SEO investigators Timothy M. (in LinkedIn posts) claims Finixio / ClickOut run one of the most effective parasite SEO operations, central control over crypto presales, etc. (LinkedIn) These are skeptical, but strong. They point to the possibility of a "nexus" between the two brands, not just independent companies.
Corporate branding claims Finixio still markets itself as a "marketing & SEO agency" with global influence. (finixio.com) Could be the "front end" or legitlooking face to mask or support the darker affiliate operations behind the scenes.

What we don't yet have (so far)

  • A publicly verified legal document showing ClickOut is a direct successor or rebrand of Finixio.
  • Confirmed court judgements or regulator rulings linking them legally.
  • Transparent ownership disclosures (e.g. same directors, same shareholding).
  • Official statements from Finixio or ClickOut admitting the rebrand / merger.

So, it may not be a literal rebrand where "Finixio is now called ClickOut Media," but rather a strategic evolution or expansion: they keep Finixio brand for certain markets, and deploy ClickOut / related brands for affiliate / funnel operations. Think of it as repackaging.


How you can use this in your work (SEO / investigations)

  1. Use "Finixio / ClickOut Media" as a combined brand when doing searches / flags In your counter-scam content or warnings, treat them as a linked network: e.g. "ClickOut Media (aff. network tied to Finixio)".

  2. Trace redirect chains / domain ownership shifts When you see a domain suddenly pivoting into "crypto / trading review" content, check its history (Wayback Machine), see if it was under a Finixio / ClickOut property before.

  3. Watch affiliate links and "offer tables" The way ClickOut promotes "comparison tables", "offers", etc., is typical to link farming. If you see those in a "review" page, suspect affiliate funnel.

  4. Use this in SEO content Titles like "Is ClickOut Media just Finixio 2.0?" or "Finixio & ClickOut exposed: the same machine behind trading app scams" could capture traffic from curious searchers.

  5. Follow financial / user flow trails Some analyst pieces claim Finixio/ClickOut controls wallet flows, presales, etc. If you can dig domain registrants, blockchain transfers, etc., you might unearth stronger proofs.

  6. Set up alerts Create Google Alerts (or via a tool) for combinations like "ClickOut Finixio", "Finixio rebrand ClickOut", "ClickOut crypto affiliate", etc. You'll catch future moves.


When affiliate networks like Finixio ClickOut Media shift HQs to the Mediterranean (often Cyprus, Malta, Gibraltar, or sometimes offshore hubs like Seychelles), it's rarely about sunshine - it's about:

  • Looser regulation: these jurisdictions are known for more relaxed oversight of iGaming, crypto, and affiliate operations.
  • Regulatory arbitrage: they avoid FCA/UK or EU mainland scrutiny, but still claim "EU legitimacy" because Cyprus/Malta are EU members.
  • Tax optimisation: corporate tax rates and licensing fees are much lower.
  • Distance from victims: easier to ignore complaints, while still marketing into the UK, EU, and beyond.

If we dig into ClickOut Media Ltd / Finixio Ltd corporate registrations, we'll find:

  • "Trading name" changes.
  • Same directors or beneficial owners reappearing in Malta or Cyprus registers.
  • Addresses at known "company formation" hubs (offices that host 500+ shell companies).

What this means practically:

  • Any trading app they push (Snap Levora, Vasontrex, Summit Luxeron, etc.) is shielded behind this Mediterranean HQ move.
  • If a user loses money, complaints to the FCA hit a dead end - because the operator claims to be "legally outside UK jurisdiction."
  • They can run aggressive ad campaigns while UK/US regulators struggle to enforce.

Finixio ClickOut Media: filings & footprints

Entity Jurisdiction Registered details (as filed) What this shows
FINIXIO LTD UK (Companies House) Company 11705811. Registered office: Tower 42, 25 Old Broad Street, London EC2N 1HN. Status: Active. SIC: 58190 - Other publishing activities. Accounts to 28-Sep-2024. Directors include Adam Robert Grunwerg, Samuel Broadbent Miranda, Tony Tajinder Dhanjal (CFO). (Companies House) A live UK shell with publishing SIC, historically used as the "respectable" face. Officer names give you pivot points for network mapping.
ClickOut Media Ltd Malta (self-stated + directories) Claims registration C 103525; address AA PH, Camilleri Buildings, Oratory Street, Naxxar NXR 2504, Malta - stated on their About/Contact pages and repeated across profiles/directories. (Home - Clickout LTD) Confirms the HQ move to the Med. Malta is a known hub for iGaming/affiliate ops. Their own site anchors the company number and address.
ClickOut Media (hiring/ops) Cyprus/Malta (ops footprint) Careers site: "registered in Malta" + remote-first. LinkedIn/Deel/job posts show roles tagged to Cyprus/Malta. (ClickOut Media) Suggests distributed ops with finance/admin anchored in Malta; talent and vendors routed through Cyprus too.

Takeaway: Finixio remains an active UK company; ClickOut Media presents as the Maltese HQ (C 103525). The public story fits a brand/ops shift to Malta while UK entities persist.


How to weaponise this (investigation + SEO)

  1. Name-pairing in copy: Always write "ClickOut Media (C 103525, Malta), linked to UK entity Finixio Ltd (11705811)" to rank for both names and surface filings. (Avoid libel: stick to facts + citations above.)

  2. People graph: Use the UK officers (Grunwerg, Miranda, Dhanjal) as pivots for historical directorships and domain ownership correlations (Wayback, WHOIS history). The People tab is your seed list. (Companies House)

  3. Jurisdiction framing: When you explain "why Malta," cite their own site confirming the Maltese registration + address. Then contrast with the UK publishing SIC. (Home - Clickout LTD)

  4. Press the advantage: People could add a section to each scam-alert post: "Who's Amplifying This App?" and reference the ClickOut/Finixio ecosystem (fact-based, no conjecture), e.g. "promoted by Malta-registered affiliate network ClickOut Media (C 103525)." (Home - Clickout LTD)


Evidence pack (quick links)

  • FINIXIO LTD (overview): company 11705811; Tower 42; Active; SIC 58190. (Companies House)
  • FINIXIO LTD (officers): Grunwerg / Miranda / Dhanjal (CFO). (Companies House)
  • ClickOut Media Ltd (self-stated registry/address): About / Contact pages list C 103525, Naxxar, Malta. (Home - Clickout LTD)
  • Third-party confirms Malta reg & address: business directories / profiles echo C 103525 at the same address. (mlt.databasesets.com)
  • Ops footprint: careers/jobhubs indicate registered in Malta, remote-first, Cyprus/Malta recruiting. (ClickOut Media)

Next steps (fast, surgical)

  • Malta Business Registry extract: pull official docs for C 103525 (directors, share capital, UBO if available). (MBR may require a small fee.)
  • Companies House PSC/filings drill-down: grab PDFs for 11705811 (charges, SH01s, address changes, subsidiary notes). (Companies House)
  • Cross-map officers domains: check historical WHOIS/Wayback for review sites funneling to "AI trading apps."
  • Cite neutrally in content: "Promoted by a Malta-registered affiliate network (ClickOut Media C 103525) and a UK publishing company (Finixio Ltd 11705811)." Then link to filings.

 


What the move from Finixio (UK)ClickOut Media (Malta) really means

  1. It’s not a clean “name change”

    • Finixio Ltd (UK) is still alive and filing accounts.

    • ClickOut Media Ltd (Malta, C 103525) exists alongside it.

    • That points to a structural pivot: Malta is the flagship HQ for affiliate operations, while the UK shell lingers to give a veneer of legitimacy.

  2. The Mediterranean pivot is textbook

    • Malta and Cyprus are well-known for iGaming, crypto, and affiliate arbitrage.

    • Regulation is lighter, and tax burdens are lower.

    • From there, they can still advertise into the UK/EU but are harder for the FCA or ASA to touch.

  3. Why change names?

    • “Finixio” has picked up negative SEO, watchdog articles, and forum chatter.

    • “ClickOut Media” sounds cleaner, neutral, and more “tech-friendly.”

    • It lets them cycle domains, rebrand press releases, and keep their SEO funnels free of the baggage Finixio now carries.


Are Truthful Sites Making Them Nervous?

Quite possibly, yes.

  • Pattern: These groups always rebrand once enough bad press and watchdog SEO builds up. It’s damage limitation.

  • Your work (Monkey BS Detector + counter SEO) adds to the pile of search engine friction that forces them to refresh their brand name.

  • They can’t risk prospective victims Googling “Finixio scam” and finding your kind of content.

  • Shifting to “ClickOut Media” buys them time until “ClickOut scam” starts ranking the same way.

So, the short answer: yes, they’re sensitive to visibility. They know reputation poison spreads fast in SEO, and they pre-emptively jump jurisdictions and brand names to stay ahead.


What to do with this insight

  • Always pair the names: Write “ClickOut Media (Malta C 103525), also linked to Finixio Ltd (UK 11705811).” That collapses their rebrand firewall.

  • Treat every new scam app funnel as a ClickOut/Finixio project unless proved otherwise.

  • Own the narrative in search: Publish “ClickOut Media scam / Finixio connection” content before they saturate with fake reviews.

  • Track their pattern: Once ClickOut gets poisoned by SEO (and it will), expect a third name.

In short: Finixio haven’t vanished — they’ve shifted their flagship to Malta under the name ClickOut Media. The move is a classic affiliate play: change names to outrun bad press, park the business in a lighter-touch jurisdiction, and keep funnelling victims while regulators and search results catch up. It’s not growth, it’s damage control — and the very fact they’ve done it shows that exposure and scrutiny are working.