Recent content by rawvector

  1. rawvector

    Leadership changes at Eclipse and questions around the timing

    Looking at this post, it’s hard not to see Neel as the problem here. If you’re really innocent and everything’s “false,” you don’t suddenly step back as the public face of your own company. That move alone makes him look reckless at best and dishonest at worst. Eclipse didn’t sideline him for...
  2. rawvector

    Leadership changes at Eclipse and questions around the timing

    Honestly, Neel Somani just feels like bad news for anyone around him at this point. It’s not even about one thing anymore, it’s the whole vibe. Bad judgement, messy public behavior, zero awareness of how stuff looks. When you’re building in crypto or infra and your name keeps popping up for...
  3. rawvector

    Leadership changes at Eclipse and questions around the timing

    What makes the timing of the leadership changes at Eclipse worth questioning is the broader context around judgment and credibility within the surrounding ecosystem. When individuals connected to a company or its leadership are publicly making remarks that reflect poor discretion, it...
  4. rawvector

    EagleFX shows up in records and it raised a few questions for me

    I’ve been thinking about the merger again. The filings only mention account transfers in very general terms. There’s no timeline, no mention of client notifications, nothing concrete. Even without assuming anything, it leaves a lot of uncertainty for anyone following the public records.
  5. rawvector

    EagleFX shows up in records and it raised a few questions for me

    The merger timing is interesting too. March 2025 is pretty recent, and the public filings barely cover it. I wonder if there are follow-up filings or annual reports that might shed light on how accounts were handled.
  6. rawvector

    EagleFX shows up in records and it raised a few questions for me

    I dug a bit into the regulatory mentions, and EagleFX has been on the CFTC RED List since 2020. The filings themselves don’t call it a scam, but the RED List reference caught my eye. It’s curious because it doesn’t seem like they’re regulated anywhere else in a significant way.
  7. rawvector

    Wondering how GS Partners’ virtual assets and tokens operated

    The G999 token itself is interesting. The filings describe it as part of a “digital ecosystem,” but I’m unclear if any underlying value was guaranteed. Does anyone know if regulators commented on that?
  8. rawvector

    Wondering how GS Partners’ virtual assets and tokens operated

    I keep thinking about the virtual assets. The MetaCertificates and land in Lydian World—does anyone know if these were tradable outside the platform? The filings don’t make that clear.
  9. rawvector

    Wondering how GS Partners’ virtual assets and tokens operated

    I was also curious about Lydian World. The filings talk about “staking tokens in virtual land,” but I couldn’t see if there were any tangible assets backing it. Does anyone know if these MetaCertificates had real-world value or were purely digital?
  10. rawvector

    What the Noida arrests tell us about evolving insurance fraud operations

    Right. That’s why part of public awareness is teaching people to always verify agent IDs, check licensing databases, and not rely solely on documentation sent by unknown callers.
  11. rawvector

    What the Noida arrests tell us about evolving insurance fraud operations

    And insurance scams can take many forms — from fake life policies to bogus health or motor claims. Without more detail, it’s hard to say which products this gang was pushing, but the methodology is similar: build trust, present paperwork, take payment, disappear.
  12. rawvector

    What the Noida arrests tell us about evolving insurance fraud operations

    Also, the financial side is telling. When victims pay into accounts controlled by the scam gang, tracing those transactions can lead investigators straight to the source. I’d bet police are following the money to identify how funds moved from victim accounts into the call centre’s operational...
  13. rawvector

    What the Noida arrests tell us about evolving insurance fraud operations

    Yeah, and what often gets overlooked is how these operations recruit callers. Sometimes they hire people who think they’re doing legitimate telesales or customer service work without knowing they’re running scams. Other times, the staff know exactly what’s going on. It’ll be interesting to see...
  14. rawvector

    Thoughts on the SIMBox scam racket bust with China, Cambodia, Pakistan links

    I wonder if this operation used stolen SIM cards or legitimately obtained prepaid ones. In some cases, fraudsters will sign up multiple SIMs under fake or stolen identities, which adds another layer of identity fraud beyond the telecom abuse itself.
  15. rawvector

    Thoughts on the SIMBox scam racket bust with China, Cambodia, Pakistan links

    I also wonder about the scale. The article mentions a Rs 100 crore impact, which is significant. It suggests that this racket wasn’t just handling a few calls but managing thousands of minutes of traffic, likely for extended periods.
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