Just like clockwork: one scam dies, the next emerges with a new skin, a new name, but the same stench underneath. Now it's "The Sarvontex App" - sleek logo, glowing promises, probably another fake BBC ad or Sky-style expos pushing it.

Why Sarvontex Now?
These names are:
- Machine-generated to sound fintech or biotech-adjacent
- Non-existent online beforehand (no Google footprint = easy manipulation)
- Close enough to real crypto platforms to blur recognition (think "Synthetix" or "SwanDEX")
It's a hydra-head tactic:
Chop off Napsordex? Sarvontex emerges. Shut down Sarvontex? Get ready for Bitvarion, QuantexFlow, or ZerpexAI.
How They Recycle the Scam:
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New fake brand
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Same scam funnel:
- Fake news article
- Stolen photos
- 250 minimum deposit
- "Live trading results" = animated JavaScript lie
-
Same backend boiler room operation
- Scripted calls
- High-pressure upsells
- Withdrawal delays or refusal
And this time? Probably targeting the same Facebook users who clicked before, with a new front.
What You Can Do Right Now:
1. Save the Ad
- Screenshot or copy the ad text, landing page, and URL
- Track where the ad redirects
- Often you'll find the same host, Cloudflare config, or reused CSS from previous scams
2. Expose the Pattern
You already have:
- Napsordex
- Lentrix Flow
- Quantum AI
- Sarvontex
Start mapping it. We can build a:
- "Scam Family Tree"
- Timeline of rebranding
- Database of names, URLs, tactics
3. Publicly shame it
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Create a YouTube video, WordPress blog post, or FB post with the heading:
"The Sarvontex App is the Same Scam as Napsordex - Here's the Proof"
-
Use side-by-side screenshots of:
- The fake news articles
- The landing pages
- The call scripts (if you have them)
How do they get websites ranking for a new fake app every day?
This is the dark, greasy engine room of the whole scam machine - not just how they create fake apps, but how they make them rank instantly.
Here's the brutal truth:
How They Get Fake Apps to Rank High So Quickly
1. Affiliate SEO Networks
These scammers don't work alone - they use entire affiliate networks with hundreds of sites ready to rank for any new scam.
-
These are pre-built domains like:
cryptoweekly[dot]top
uk-invests[dot]news
best-ai-trading-bots[dot]net
-
They run "review sites" with SEO-optimized landing pages for every new name they're fed.
-
The moment "Sarvontex App" goes live, 40+ sites publish content titled:
"Sarvontex App Review 2025 - Scam or Legit? What We Found Will Shock You"
These are AI-generated, keyword-stuffed, and backlinked internally across dozens of fake blogs.
2. They Use Expired Domains with Authority
Many of these sites were once:
- Real blogs
- Local newspapers
- Abandoned forums
They buy expired domains with backlink history and authority, then repopulate them with fake review content.
This gives them an instant boost in search visibility - without needing to build fresh trust.
3. Private Blog Networks (PBNs)
They often operate PBNs: hundreds of connected sites on separate IPs, all linking to each other.
- These generate fake trust and fake domain authority in Google's eyes.
- They stuff anchor text like "Sarvontex App Legit" and "best AI crypto bot 2025" into dozens of backlinks within 24-48 hours.
4. Google Favors Recency
Google's algorithm is still susceptible to fresh content with exact match keywords - even if the site is brand new.
So when people start Googling:
"Sarvontex App scam or legit"
The first 10 results are all scammer-controlled fake reviews - praising the app and linking to the sign-up funnel.
5. Reddit / Quora / YouTube Spam
They deploy bots and freelancers to:
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Post on Reddit using disposable accounts
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Ask and answer "Is Sarvontex App Legit?" on Quora
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Publish low-effort YouTube videos with clickbait titles like:
"Sarvontex App Review - Is It a SCAM? Watch Before You Invest!"
Even if the accounts are banned later, they get indexed fast, and that's all they need.
6. Paid Google Ads (Before the Ban)
Sometimes, they even buy Google ads for a few days until they get shut down.
- They cloak landing pages
- They use brand spoofing ("As seen on BBC")
- Then they vanish and launch the next name
So What Can You Do?
Build a blacklist of known affiliate domains
We can scrape and flag the top 50 that are reused for every scam.
Publish fast, counter-ranking posts
If you post real content titled:
"The Sarvontex App Scam - Here's How It Works (2025)"
...and backlink it smartly, it will rise. Especially from trusted domains like sircles.net.
Expose their SEO model
A blog post titled "How Crypto Scammers Use Fake Review Sites to Dominate Google" could rank and pull search traffic away from them.
They Seem to Adapt Based Upon YouTube Rankings
Yes - exactly. these scam networks are actively adapting to YouTube search trends, just as they do with Google. In fact, YouTube is often the test lab where they trial names, ad hooks, and keywords - then scale them to the affiliate network once a "brand" starts gaining traction.
How They Use YouTube Rankings to Evolve the Scam
1. They Use YouTube as Early SEO Intel
They monitor:
-
Trending searches like:
- "Lentrix Flow scam or legit"
- "Napsordex review"
- "Martin Lewis crypto 2025"
-
They use tools like TubeBuddy or VidIQ to spot high-traffic keywords with low competition
-
When they see a scam expos video start to rank or get clicks, they immediately:
These go live within hours.
2. They Flood YouTube with Fake Reviews
Once a name catches on, they mass-produce:
- AI-voiced videos
- Slideshow-style reviews
- Keyword-stuffed comment bait
These are made on Fiverr or via bulk YouTube bot uploads. Each video:
- Contains fake trust signals
- Drops links to redirect domains or affiliate funnels
- Comments are pre-filled with "I made 920 in 3 days!" styled bait
3. They Track YouTube Analytics to Refine Branding
If a scam name like "Napsordex" starts tanking in video CTR or dislike ratios, they change the name but reuse:
- The landing page layout
- The script
- The boiler room call flow
They even A/B test:
- App names with more Xs or Zs ("Zypta Flow")
- Names that sound like real platforms ("Sarvontex" vs. "Zerodex")
4. They Mimic the SEO Style of Real Exposers
They've learned from real scam-watchers like yourself. That's why their videos now have titles like:
"Scam or Legit? Shocking Truth About [App Name]!"
But when you watch the video? It's all praise. A fake twist. Because YouTube sees only the title and engagement, not truth.
What Can Be Done
1. Reverse their strategy:
Start posting videos preemptively titled:
"Is [Fake App Name] a Scam or Legit? Here's the Truth (2025)"
Even if the app doesn't exist yet. If it does later - you're already there.
2. Hijack their YouTube search results
- Title: "Sarvontex App - SCAM WARNING (Not Endorsed by Martin Lewis)"
- Tags: Their keywords plus your own trust keywords like "fraud report", "how scam works", etc.
- Description: Rich with affiliate alert terms
- Pin a comment with links to your verified blog post
3. Track what names are getting spammed
We can create a script that:
- Monitors YouTube daily for new uploads titled "Scam or Legit"
- Extracts app names
- Alerts you whenever a new one gains traction
Then you can create content before their fake reviews dominate.