The Acai Berry Scam

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By Pseudonymous

It’s difficult to traverse the internet these days without coming across the latest promised ‘miracle food,’ acai berries. I recently wrote another hub about a fad diet that promises to get you ripped in four weeks and is also based around acai. However, in this hub I want to specifically address the fact that, aside from being little more than overpriced berries, people are actually getting properly scammed by these products through sneaky credit card charges!

If you go to one of these websites they all typically offer you a supposed free trial. However, to sign up, you of course need to provide credit card details. Anyway, tucked away into the small print of the agreement you sign as part of the free trial is that if you do not cancel in 14 days they will charge you around $65 - $80 (£40 - £50) per month until you cancel!

The worst part of this scam is that they make it very difficult to cancel. It seems as though these companies are giving false or unobtainable phone numbers so that in actual fact it is impossible to get hold of them and cancel your order! Even if you do get through you are often put on hold for a ridiculous length of time to get you to hang up.

While a few people have reported being able to cancel their order. If you find yourself in this situation and cannot contact the company you bought the acai berries from, the best advice is to cancel your card so that they cannot get any more money from you.

It’s worth reiterating that these acai berries and supplements are not good enough for you to be worth the money. Acai berries are basically just another fruit. They have high but not spectacularly high levels of antioxidants which might be good for us but in what way and to what extent is still not fully understood by scientists. Even if acai berries and antioxidants are unambiguously good for you the fact is that they will not help you lose the kind of weight promised by these scams.

If you are taking acai supplements you may also be getting far less of the active ingredient, with correspondingly fewer health benefits. There has also been a suggestion that certain acai berry juices may be contaminated with benzene (a carcinogen) from poor manufacturing procedures.

While there is no confirmation of this at this time you should be asking yourself why exactly you want to risk not only your health but your money on these unproven products!

Ultimately, the best ways to lose weight don’t involve supplements and usually save you money rather than costing you money. Don’t be a victim of these scammers who could actually be endangering your health with their dodgy products!

Comments

kool 2 years ago

thx for the explainations

jigga 2 years ago

While i agree with you regarding the fact that these companies are scamming you online by trying to get you to purchase their acai supplement, it really sounds like you havent done much research regarding the acai berry. you dont have to buy them online, you can buy them at any natural and organic grocery store, the health benefits are there and they are quite worthwhile. Stick to one argument. Dont buy the supplements from these weight loss sites, you dont have to, go to a store and talk to the people working there before you make your decision.

Pseudonymous profile image

Pseudonymous Hub Author 2 years ago

Jigga, thanks for your comment. I appreciate that people can get these products from reputable dealers, but the fact is that many people are enticed by the offers available online, some of which are scams. Therefore this page is primarily a warning against buying from these online scammers, which you are in agreement with.

As for the nutritional benefits claimed for acai berries I am not saying that they are not good for you but the question is what are the specific benefits and how much better are they for you than a different kind of fruit, vegetable or supplement? There are lots of ridiculous claims surrounding the acai berry that are totally unsupported by the evidence. To put it bluntly, you saying that the benefits are 'worthwhile' doesn't mean a lot since even nutritional scientists don't fully understand how, for example, antioxidant content (which acai berries are often promoted on the basis of) translates into actual health benefits. To give a concrete example, a recent paper by Bean/Schuler/Leggett/Levin (2009) found that the antioxidant content in fruit did not predict the level of protection against oxidative damage.

You are correct in stating that the main point of this page is to warn against scammers. However I think at the moment there is still plenty of basis to be sceptical about the range of health benefits afforded by acai berries and supplements. Therefore this page has, admittedly without making much of an argument, tried to reflect that there is currently no real evidence to support the media-hyped 'superfruit' status which is being used to sell acai based products.

Toddy 21 months ago

I'd just like to add on here that your bank should be able to 'cancel' your order for you, instead of having to mess about trying to get hold of a scammer. (At least, this is true within the UK)

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