Inside the Web of Lies: The Rise of Fake Retail Networks
Online shopping should make life easier—scroll, click, pay, delivered. But 2025 has seen a dangerous twist: fake retail networks. One recently uncovered network was running 71 different scam websites, all pretending to be legit online stores. These sites used every trick in the scammer playbook—typosquatting, compromised merchant accounts, and fake ads—to lure shoppers into handing over money for goods that never arrive or that turn out to be cheap counterfeits. This is not a one-off. In fact, it's part of a much bigger scam economy fueled by digital fraud.
In 2022–2023, investigators exposed BogusBazaar, a Chinese-run fake retail network that launched more than 75,000 scam e-commerce sites. These sites impersonated global brands, scaled up using automation, and left millions in losses with hundreds of thousands of victims—particularly in Europe and the U.S. BogusBazaar showed just how industrialized scam shopping has become.
On the phishing side, there’s Darcula, a Chinese-language platform that sells phishing tools like Netflix sells subscriptions. It offers over 20,000 counterfeit domains and more than 200 phishing templates to copy brand websites, then spreads them through email, SMS, RCS, and iMessage. Between 2023–2024, Darcula helped steal 884,000 credit card details from victims in more than 100 countries.
These aren’t lone wolf scammers anymore—they’re well-oiled crime networks with the scale and organization of real corporations.
On paper, Selon Company Limited looks legitimate. It’s a UK-registered business listed under “Retail sale via mail-order houses or via Internet” with its address at Epworth House, 25 City Road, London, EC1Y 1AA. To a shopper, that sounds reassuring—after all, it’s an officially registered company.
But here’s the twist: dozens of scam websites claim to be owned by Selon Company Limited. Sites like Greenplantsed.com, Mowaven.com, Viporama.com, Obsides.com, and Uniwiinc.com all use the same formula—similar layouts, recycled content, and the same ownership claim.
This raises two possibilities: either Selon Company Limited is directly running a scam retail network, or its identity is being hijacked by fraudsters to make their fake shops look more convincing. In both cases, the effect is the same—shoppers are misled into trusting a business that isn’t what it seems.
The easiest way to spot a site run by the Uniqueness Scam Network is to check the About Us page. Almost all of them contain the same oddly phrased text—or a slight variation of it:
“At [website name] we love every passion and interest on Earth because it is a reference to your UNIQUENESS. And to create a perfect consumption experience for you is our core vision: To help you Express Yourself. To support you at [website name].”
That recycled wording has become a calling card for the Uniqueness network.
Behind the scenes, the operation is much bigger than just sloppy website copy. Several shell companies appear to have been created under the Uniqueness umbrella to process payments. Victims in the USA, UK, Europe, and Australia make purchases thinking they’re buying from a real retailer, but the money is funneled overseas—most often back to China.
To make the scheme harder to trace, these shell companies are registered in multiple jurisdictions, including the UK, Ireland, Cyprus, France, and Hong Kong. The end result? A web of fake businesses and cloned websites designed to trick shoppers worldwide.
Fake retail networks use a mix of technology and human psychology to deceive you. Here are their most common methods:
Example: Our article on is Sellbra.com Safe
Example: Greenplantsed.com Review
Stay one step ahead of scammers with these practical tips to keep your personal information and finances safe.
Scammers are no longer just building one-off fake shops; they’re running whole shopping empires powered by stolen technology, sophisticated ads, and automation. The result? Thousands of sites that look real but are designed to steal your money, your data, or both. The best defense is staying sharp: pause before you pay, double-check before you click, and verify before you trust. Fake retail networks thrive on our split-second decisions. Don’t give them the chance.
If you have already fallen victim to a scam, don’t panic. Immediately contact your bank or credit card company to report the fraudulent charges. You can also file a report with consumer protection agencies to help investigators track and shut down these criminal networks.
To proactively protect yourself, you can download the ScamAdviser App on Android or iOS to automatically check any website before you buy.