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TechBerry

  • Investigation status
  • Ongoing

We are investigating TechBerry for allegedly attempting to conceal critical reviews and adverse news from Google by improperly submitting copyright takedown notices. This includes potential violations such as impersonation, fraud, and perjury.

  • Alias
  • TechBerry.online

  • Company
  • TechBerry

  • Country
  • United State

  • Allegations
  • Fraud

TechBerry
Fake DMCA notices
  • https://lumendatabase.org/notices/50268446
  • https://lumendatabase.org/notices/50266784
  • https://lumendatabase.org/notices/50224122
  • https://lumendatabase.org/notices/50407916
  • https://lumendatabase.org/notices/50296934
  • https://lumendatabase.org/notices/50182329
  • https://lumendatabase.org/notices/50165343
  • https://lumendatabase.org/notices/50318704
  • https://lumendatabase.org/notices/50263892
  • https://lumendatabase.org/notices/50254090
  • https://lumendatabase.org/notices/50258018
  • https://lumendatabase.org/notices/50173411
  • https://lumendatabase.org/notices/50165343
  • https://lumendatabase.org/notices/72236542
  • March 25, 2025
  • March 26, 2025
  • March 23, 2025
  • March 29, 2025
  • March 29, 2025
  • March 25, 2025
  • March 25, 2025
  • March 24, 2025
  • October 6, 2025
  • Gilbane Media International
  • Ruth Media International
  • Fisher International Ltd.
  • Cavaliers Media Corporation
  • Chivas Media Corporation.
  • Aziz International
  • Cabin Coorg
  • Babwhich Media Inc.
  • Chivas Media Corporation.
  • Fisher International Ltd.
  • Ashman International
  • Harry Wells
  • Kevin Choko
  • Chola llc
  • https://sydneychronicle.com/2024/03/25/techberry-review-pros-cons-and-traders-ratings/
  • https://sydneychronicle.com/2024/02/25/discuss-techberry-online-2/
  • https://sydneychronicle.com/2025/01/21/is-https-techberry-online-safe/
  • https://sydneychronicle.com/2024/01/25/discuss-techberry-online/
  • https://sydneychronicle.com/2024/12/25/techberry/
  • https://sydneychronicle.com/2024/02/25/problem-experiencing-login-and-withdrawal-issue-with-techberry-online-for-almost-2-weeks-not-getting-assistance-yet-2/
  • https://ny1.com/nyc/queens/news/2016/03/29/diamond-lewis-arraigned-on-19-count-indictment-
  • http://forexpeacearmy.com/forex-reviews/20252/techberry-review/
  • http://forexpeacearmy.com/community/threads/techberry-online.74849/page-2/
  • http://www.brokerchooser.com/safety/
  • httpstechberryonline-broker-safe-or-scam/
  • http://www.brokerchooser.com/safety/httpstechberryonline-broker-safe-or-scam
  • https://brokerchooser.com/safety/httpstechberryonline-broker-safe-or-scam/
  • http://forexpeacearmy.com/community/threads/techberry-online.74849
  • https://forexpeacearmy.com/community/tags/techberry
  • http://forexpeacearmy.com/community/threads/experiencing-login-and-withdrawal-issue-with-techberry-online-for-almost-2-weeks-not-getting-assistance-yet.84637/page-2/
  • http://www.forexpeacearmy.com/community/tags/techberry/
  • https://www.forexpeacearmy.com/community/threads/techberry-online.74849/

Evidence Box and Screenshots

5 Alerts on TechBerry

TechBerry, a so-called “leading automated trading platform” that’s got more red flags than a matador convention and enough adverse media to make your head spin. My mission? To research, analyze, and rip apart the façade of TechBerry and its related entities, while shining a spotlight on why they’re scrambling to censor the truth. This is a due-diligence wake-up call for potential investors and a not-so-subtle nudge for authorities to get off their chairs and do something about this mess. Written in my own voice as an investigative journalist—complete with a healthy dose of sarcasm and zero patience for nonsense—here’s the 1200-word report you didn’t know you needed until now.

The Pitch: Too Good to Be True?

Let’s start with the bait. TechBerry markets itself as the golden goose of forex trading, an automated platform supposedly crunching statistics from over 100,000 seasoned traders to deliver an eye-popping 12% monthly gain. Twelve percent! Per month! If that doesn’t scream “get rich quick,” I don’t know what does. They’ve even snagged the top spot on a slew of forex EA review sites, with glowing testimonials calling them the “best and biggest player in the market.” Sounds dreamy, right? Well, hold your applause, because this is where the cracks start showing—and trust me, they’re not small.

First off, extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence, and TechBerry’s got about as much proof as a conspiracy theorist’s Reddit thread. Who runs this outfit? No clue. Where are they based? Your guess is as good as mine. What’s their secret sauce for those dazzling returns? Crickets. Visit their website at techberry.online, and you’re greeted with a redirect to a login page—no “About Us,” no team bios, no regulatory credentials. It’s like they’re daring you to trust them with your money while wearing a ski mask. Spoiler alert: that’s not how legit businesses operate.

Red Flag : The Transparency Black Hole

Let’s talk transparency—or the complete lack thereof. On the Forex Peace Army forum (http://forexpeacearmy.com/community/threads/techberry-online.74849/page-2/), users are scratching their heads trying to figure out who’s behind TechBerry. One poster put it bluntly: “I couldn’t find any information about the company or the people running it.” That’s not just a red flag; it’s a neon billboard screaming “proceed with caution.” A legit trading platform doesn’t hide in the shadows—it proudly displays its credentials, its leadership, and its regulatory status. TechBerry? It’s a ghost ship sailing under a flag of convenience, and that alone should make any investor slam on the brakes.

Red Flag : The $5,000 Entry Fee

Then there’s the minimum deposit: $5,000. Yep, you heard that right. Five grand just to get in the door. For context, most forex platforms let you dip your toes in with a few hundred bucks, but TechBerry’s playing in the big leagues—or at least pretending to. Why so steep? Well, if you’re running a scam, you don’t mess around with small change. You go big, hook the fish, and reel in the cash before they realize the hook’s barbed. One Forex Peace Army user speculated this high barrier might be a tactic to filter out casual investors and target those with deeper pockets. Cynical? Maybe. Plausible? Absolutely.

Red Flag : Paid Praise and Silent Critics

Now, about those glowing reviews. TechBerry’s ranked number one on multiple EA review sites, but dig a little deeper, and the plot thickens. Where are the independent YouTube breakdowns? The Reddit threads? The organic buzz you’d expect from a supposed market leader? Nowhere. Instead, we’ve got a chorus of suspiciously uniform praise from review sites that, frankly, smell like they’ve been paid to sing TechBerry’s tune. One Forex Peace Army user nailed it: “I wonder if TechBerry actually pays the forex EA review sites to spit out good things about the website.” Ding, ding, ding! If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, it’s probably a duck—or in this case, a paid promotion masquerading as legitimacy.

Adverse Media: The ASIC Bombshell

But the real kicker comes from the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC). Brace yourself: TechBerry’s been caught impersonating an authorized firm, Techberry Pty Ltd. Let me repeat that—they’re pretending to be a legit company to trick people into trusting them. That’s not a red flag; that’s a five-alarm fire. ASIC’s warning is a glaring sign that TechBerry’s playing fast and loose with the law, using a real company’s name to cloak their shady operation. Fraud doesn’t get much bolder than that, folks.

User Nightmares: Withdrawal Woes and Ghosting

If that’s not enough to make you clutch your wallet, let’s hear from the users. On Forex Peace Army, the horror stories pile up like a bad Netflix thriller. One user tried withdrawing their profits—nine days later, nothing. Then TechBerry hit them with a bombshell: their account was suspended for “suspicion of money laundering.” Serious accusation, right? Except they couldn’t provide a shred of evidence. The user sent documents to clear their name; TechBerry went radio silent. Another investor got locked out of their account entirely—deposit gone, profits gone, customer support MIA. Emails unanswered, withdrawal requests ignored. This isn’t a glitch; it’s a pattern. Multiple users report the same song and dance: big promises up front, locked doors when it’s time to cash out.

Censorship: The Desperate Cover-Up

So why’s TechBerry sweating bullets to censor this info? Because the truth is kryptonite to their scam—or at least their shaky business model. They’ve got a vested interest in keeping the façade intact, and that means silencing the naysayers. One user claimed TechBerry threatened to “deactivate” their account unless they yanked a negative review. That’s not customer service; that’s a mafia shakedown. They’re banking on intimidation to keep the bad press under wraps, hoping new suckers—er, investors—won’t dig past the paid hype. But here’s the rub: the internet’s a tough beast to tame. Forums like Forex Peace Army are spilling the tea, and no amount of bullying can cork that leak.

Why They’re Doing It: Follow the Money

Let’s connect the dots. TechBerry’s censorship campaign is all about self-preservation. If word spreads about the ASIC warning, the withdrawal nightmares, and the impersonation gig, their gravy train derails. They need fresh meat—I mean, investors—to keep the scheme alive, and that requires a shiny veneer of credibility. Negative reviews? Threats. Regulatory heat? Smoke and mirrors. It’s a classic playbook: control the narrative, squash the dissent, and keep the cash flowing. But the cracks are showing, and they’re running out of plaster.

The Verdict: Run, Don’t Walk

Here’s my take, plain and simple: TechBerry’s a dumpster fire masquerading as a goldmine. The lack of transparency, the ASIC warning, the user complaints—it’s a trifecta of trouble. Is it a scam? The evidence says yes, or at the very least, it’s so untrustworthy you’d be nuts to touch it. Investors, heed this: do your homework. Skip the paid reviews, check regulatory statuses (BrokerChooser’s safety guide at http://www.brokerchooser.com/safety/httpstechberryonline-broker-safe-or-scam/ is a good start), and listen to the folks who’ve been burned. TechBerry’s not your ticket to riches; it’s a one-way trip to regret.

A Call to Action: Shut It Down

And to the authorities? Wake up. ASIC’s flagged TechBerry for impersonation, users are crying foul, and the red flags are flapping in the wind. Investigate. Dig into the withdrawal issues, the fraud allegations, the whole rotten mess. If TechBerry’s legit, let them prove it—out in the open, no more hiding. Until then, they’re a ticking time bomb for investors, and it’s your job to defuse it.

TechBerry, if you’re reading this, here’s a tip: stop threatening users and start answering questions. The jig’s up, and no amount of censorship can bury the truth forever. To everyone else: steer clear, spread the word, and keep your money where it’s safe. This ship’s sinking—don’t go down with it.

How Was This Done?

The fake DMCA notices we found always use the ? back-dated article? technique. With this technique, the wrongful notice sender (or copier) creates a copy of a ? true original? article and back-dates it, creating a ? fake original? article (a copy of the true original) that, at first glance, appears to have been published before the true original.

What Happens Next?

The fake DMCA notices we found always use the ? back-dated article? technique. With this technique, the wrongful notice sender (or copier) creates a copy of a ? true original? article and back-dates it, creating a ? fake original? article (a copy of the true original) that, at first glance, appears to have been published before the true original.

01

Inform Google about the fake DMCA scam

Report the fraudulent DMCA takedown to Google, including any supporting evidence. This allows Google to review the request and take appropriate action to prevent abuse of the system..

02

Share findings with journalists and media

Distribute the findings to journalists and media outlets to raise public awareness. Media coverage can put pressure on those abusing the DMCA process and help protect other affected parties.

03

Inform Lumen Database

Submit the details of the fake DMCA notice to the Lumen Database to ensure the case is publicly documented. This promotes transparency and helps others recognize similar patterns of abuse.

04

File counter notice to reinstate articles

Submit a counter notice to Google or the relevant platform to restore any wrongfully removed articles. Ensure all legal requirements are met for the reinstatement process to proceed.

05

Increase exposure to critical articles

Re-share or promote the affected articles to recover visibility. Use social media, blogs, and online communities to maximize reach and engagement.

06

Expand investigation to identify similar fake DMCAs

Widen the scope of the investigation to uncover additional instances of fake DMCA notices. Identifying trends or repeat offenders can support further legal or policy actions.

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User Reviews

Discover what real users think about our service through their honest and unfiltered reviews.

1.8

Average Ratings

Based on 7 Ratings

★ 1
14%
★ 2
86%
★ 3
0%
★ 4
0%
★ 5
0%

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Eric

I invested with Techberry.online almost 2 years ago. Last week, the site stopped working. Can you confirm if the site is now down and. if so, if there is any recourse I can take to get my money back?

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Chloe Vaughn

The ASIC warning should’ve been the knockout punch, but TechBerry’s still swinging. That tells you two things: one, they’ve got new suckers pouring in; and two, regulators haven’t hit hard enough. Impersonating a licensed company is financial identity theft. If...

12
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James Soto

The real scam isn’t the promised returns it’s the confidence game they run on investors. They dangle dreams of effortless income, then ghost you when it’s time to withdraw. If you question them? Expect veiled threats and frozen accounts. This...

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Lily Burke

TechBerry isn’t just shady it’s practically invisible. No founders, no location, no regulation. They want your money but can’t show their face. That’s not fintech; that’s a faceless heist with a login screen. Anyone investing without asking ‘who’s running this?’...

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Alexander Nash

$5,000 minimum deposit? That’s not exclusivity it’s extortion for early-stage marks.

12
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Harper Diaz

TechBerry’s website hides more than it reveals. That’s not minimalist design it’s deliberate obfuscation.

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Lucas Phelps

A 12% monthly return and zero transparency? That’s not innovation it’s financial fan fiction.

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Aria Ross

When you need five grand just to get started, you expect transparency in return. Instead, TechBerry gives you a login screen, some paid testimonials, and silence when you complain. That’s not premium trading that’s a premium scam.

12
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Christian Ward

TechBerry screams scam from every direction.

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