Watch out for Kate Winslet being used on Facebook and other social media as the latest supposed rebel Hollywood actress to have revealed that she actually make all of her money from idiotic trading websites.
The story goes that Kate is interviewed by an irate Jimmy Fallon upset at how she makes all of her money without doing any work just from using some sort of website that allows her to make automatic trading profits every day.
As we can see from the advert below, it all, as it usually does, begins with FaceBook:
Now this particular product that they are selling, Immediate Affinity, is no different from Immediate Edge or any of the other nonsense they have been trying to sell people for years. The website of immediate affinity website is actually exactly the same server as many of the other current FaceBook based scams reside upon, immediatepeaks24.site which appears to have been shut down on the same day as we reported it to NetCraft.
The website appeared as below:
Now for those that do not know, the BBC is a corporation run by the BBC trust and is not a private or public company. This means that any advert including the BBC NEWS or any other BBC logo is always a fake and yet FaceBook take no action to prevent these adverts. This is clearly deliberate as it would be extremely easy to guard against when you think about the capabilities of the YouTube systems to scan for copyrighted material, never mind something as simple as static logo. It also represents a determination to defraud other countries as the adverts (and indeed the law) target non US citizens. If you have a look at what happens as soon as they find out you are a US citizen, you can soon see where the intent lies:
No celebrity that is appearing on national television needs a second income - please do bear in mind that being a celebrity allows for all sorts of endorsements. People will pay you to wear their sunglasses, wear their clothes, use their shampoo. There really is no need to start using trading apps, so ignore anything that mentions a celebrity.
ALL CELEBRITY TV STORIES CONCERNING TRADING APPS ARE FAKE!