• Ever wanted an RSS feed of all your favorite gaming news sites? Go check out our new Gaming Headlines feed! Read more about it here.

Deleted member 3812

User requested account closure
Banned
Oct 25, 2017
8,821
Well known scambaiter Kitboga has been recently recognized by Wired for his efforts, more recently he has started targeting coronavirus scammers where he has on average 7,000 viewers on Twitch watching his livestreams. Wired reports that Kitboga got into scambaiting after his grandmother who had dementia was taken advantaged of by a scammer:

www.wired.com

A Twitch Streamer Is Exposing Coronavirus Scams Live

Kitboga has built a following by trolling telemarketers. Covid-19 opportunists have given him a whole new crop of targets.

03.27.2020
A Twitch Streamer Is Exposing Coronavirus Scams Live
Kitboga has built a following by trolling telemarketers. Covid-19 opportunists have given him a whole new crop of targets.

EARLIER THIS WEEK, live on Twitch, the streamer Kitboga attempted to place a wholesale order for an essential oil that, the woman on the phone implied to him, cured Covid-19.

There is, of course, no cure for Covid-19, the disease that has infected hundreds of thousands of people internationally since January. If there were, it wouldn't consist of oregano oil, cinnamon, clove bud, and eucalyptus essential oils. Kitboga was on the phone with a scammer. Eleven thousand live viewers were watching him expose her.

Using a voice modulator, Kitboga assumed a persona called Barbara "Barbie" Kendal, explaining that he wanted to place a wholesale order for essential oils and distribute it to the Mayo Clinic in Arizona. Kitboga continued to press her for details about the product—How many people has it cured? Can I keep the cure on the countertop? Can I pour the cure into a hot bath after my bridge game?—which she readily answered, never correcting his terminology. The scammer, who said her name was Anne, took down the hospital's address.

"They should call you Saint Anne," said Kitboga, eliding the words into the sound of "satan."

You'd be hard-pressed to find someone who interacts with scam artists more often than Kitboga. Several times a week, Kitboga goes live on Twitch, where an average of 7,000 viewers watch him mercilessly troll the sort of people who tell old ladies in nursing homes that they owe the IRS thousands of dollars—and get their MasterCard number. Under the guise of grandma Edna or valley girl Navaeh, Kitboga might let a scammer posing as an antivirus software salesperson install ransomware onto a computer, or explain ad nauseum how to transfer bitcoin to India. Weaving absurd narratives out of these interactions, Kitboga frustrates as much of the scammers' time as possible before the big reveal: He's not Barbie, Edna, or Navaeh, and he thinks these people are scumbags.

"You are a liar and a thief. You should be locked up," he told a Covid-19 scammer earlier this week. Viewers spammed happy alarm bells to his stream's accompanying chat.

Earlier this month, the Federal Trade Commission issued a notice about coronavirus scams that referenced new robocalls and online offers advertising coronavirus treatments and at-home test kits. Noting that "there currently are no vaccines, pills, potions, lotions, lozenges or other prescription or over-the-counter products available to treat or cure coronavirus disease 2019 (Covid-19)—online or in stores," the FTC warned consumers to be on high alert for con artists. Over the last couple of months, digital marketplaces like Amazon have struggled to remove bogus listings for miracle nasal sprays and canine testing kits.

A couple of days ago, Kitboga, who keeps his real-life identity and location a secret, trawled Google for coronavirus-related scams. The search turned up an article under the Fox News header—though not on any Fox News site—that read, "While the world is waiting for a vaccine, one mom has found a solution to fight back against the coronavirus outbreak." While the byline named an actual Fox News editor, the article was fake. It advertised a product called Immunity Blend, which promised to "distribute benefits" to entire households and "protect against environmental threats." The fake article claimed that "even if you do catch a virus, the symptoms and time it affects you [sic] experience, are greatly reduced."

Said the mom in the ad, "I am not worried about the Coronavirus hitting our family because I have 3 ways to fight back in just 1 bottle of botanical oils."

The concoction contains eucalyptus oil, which the ad claims has been "proven effective" against the swine flu and Herpes type 1. "Could it also kill the 2020 Coronavirus," it asks. The website links to an order form, underneath which a warning in red booms: "Due to global outbreaks and pandemic, demand is HIGH and supply is limited for our Powerful Immunity Blend." The website and Facebook page, which was created March 16, are still up.

On his livestreamed calls to scammers, Kitboga tries to remain calm and collected, persisting in his line of questioning to glean as much information as possible. Over the last three years, he's dealt with scammers who try to squeeze thousands of dollars from old ladies under the false threat of arrest or imprisonment. (In fact, he got into this line of work after a scammer took advantage of his real-life grandmother, who had dementia.) This wave of Covid-19 snake oil, he says, feels different.

"I think a lot of the scams so far are based around the fear and uncertainty of it," says Kitboga. "I'm not a psychologist, but I imagine you are less likely to make rational decisions when you're afraid. Obviously there's lots of fear right now. When the scammers I talk to say things like, 'Ma'am, if you don't give me my money back you'll go to jail' or 'I'm calling the police right now,' they're trying to put you in that fearful, uncertain situation. In this case, we already are in that situation. So the scammers are one step ahead."

Kitboga says the next scam to look out for is telemarketers pretending to be government officials. People who don't know better might give their bank account information to a so-called government official who's offering to unload a no-strings-attached $1,200 government aid check. He plans to expose them on his Twitch channel when he nails them down.

"When I heard about the stimulus, I started thinking, 'There are gonna be scammers. Someone's gonna call and say, 'We're the government trying to give you $1,000 or $2,000, and you have to pay us money."
 

weekev

Is this a test?
Member
Oct 25, 2017
6,213
Good guy Kitboga. These people truly are the sun of the earth.
 
Oct 27, 2017
12,288
Was funny because my partner and I were actively watching him do this yesterday when I scrolled through Twitter and saw his face and this article retweeted by someone. Seeing world's collide is wild sometimes.
 

Shaneus

Member
Oct 27, 2017
8,896
Did no one else get the pun Barbie Kendal? Or was it too obvious and didn't necessitate a post pointing it out?
 

Pocky4Th3Win

Member
Oct 31, 2017
4,081
Minnesota
So does he do anything to stop them or does he just waste their time and then insults them?

I watch Jim Browning who actually reverse hacks them and even sometimes gets people refunds. Hell he has shut down entire operations..
 

rsfour

Member
Oct 26, 2017
16,749
World needs more kitboga and Jim browning instead of whatever trash that infests twitch and yt.
 

crimzonflame

Member
Oct 25, 2017
5,754
I enjoy his content and his vids, but I feel his chat are just people making fun of Indian people and their accents.
 

OgTheEnigma

Member
Oct 27, 2017
2,803
Liverpool
So does he do anything to stop them or does he just waste their time and then insults them?

I watch Jim Browning who actually reverse hacks them and even sometimes gets people refunds. Hell he has shut down entire operations..
If Kitboga gets given any bank details (which he hides on-stream) then he'll report it to the authorities. He'll also avoid doing a 'reveal' on those calls, so the scammer doesn't know they've been compromised.
 

Valcrist

Tic-Tac-Toe Champion
Member
Oct 25, 2017
9,692
Kitboga is a good dude. He's one of the more wholesome scam baiters.
 

Gorger

Member
Oct 25, 2017
1,628
Norway
Been watching a ton of Kitboga, Jim Browning and other scam baiters lately. Never knew until recently that this was a thing and now I am completely hooked. Kitboga is incredible good at what he is doing, really quick on his feet with improvising and manipulates the scammers effortlessly by playing up to three different characters at the same time, putting them in hilarious, bizarre and awkward situations making a fool out of them. He even has a ready-to-use soundboard with sound effects of everything from mall noises to driving sounds depending on the situation to make the bait more believable, and in-between he even mutes himself to explain the audience exactly what the scammers are trying to do and how the scam works. It's very educational, entertaining, and Kitboga himself does seem like a genuinely kind and friendly person. Glad scam baiting is getting more and more recognition, cause what these scammers are doing is utterly disgusting and reprehensible.
 

Deleted member 12790

User requested account closure
Banned
Oct 27, 2017
24,537
Never heard of this guy before but went and watched one of his streams and holy shit I'm dying. These people figured out who he was because he called them a few days ago and are cussing him out, and the streamer has the most amazingly smug look on his face and it rules. I love this channel now haha.
 

so1337

Member
Oct 28, 2017
3,476
I've been watching his videos all week and it's given me some much needed laughs. I love when he sprinkles in some hints that he's fucking with the scammers and it completely flies over their heads most of the time. Like when the granny starts talking about subreddits or stuff like that.
 

Saganator

Member
Oct 26, 2017
7,023
Never heard of this guy before but went and watched one of his streams and holy shit I'm dying. These people figured out who he was because he called them a few days ago and are cussing him out, and the streamer has the most amazingly smug look on his face and it rules. I love this channel now haha.
Dude it's hilarious. There is one where he pretends to be a grandma and a ditzy granddaughter at the same time, the scammer gets so obviously frustrated and flips out.
 

Box

Banned
Oct 27, 2017
6,629
Lancashire
^
He's slipped up a few times and I watched it once live on stream and there was a genuine few seconds of silence before the scammer carried on and Kit pulled a face and chat went booloo. reminded me of Yarp and Narp. Really funny. This geezer is good people and man, the depths these fuckers will go to to get their gift cards holy moly. Sun of the earth indeed :D
 
Oct 27, 2017
12,288
My partner and I got really into his streams and would pretty much only only watch them every night and on weekends. We fell off a little bit recently but still watch. Dude is an A+ entertainer. I wouldn't be surprised if someone tries to sign him to a deal for a reality show or something.
 

Deleted member 12790

User requested account closure
Banned
Oct 27, 2017
24,537
"You are a mother fucker youtuber, you put me on youtube."
"Your mother did what on youtube?"
"YOU. ARE. A. MOTHER. FUCKER. YOUTUBER."
"What? You have a youtube channel? What are you talking about?"
"Go fuck yourself, you mother fucker youtuber! You mother fuc--'
"Sir! Sir! Let me ask you a question!"
"uh... go ahead..."
"Can you say subscribe to Kitboga for my channel?"
*hangs up*

lmfao
 

Deleted member 12790

User requested account closure
Banned
Oct 27, 2017
24,537
Oh man this old woman voice he's doing right now is amazing, haha. The way he phrases things sounds so old timey it makes me laugh.

"I have this old laptop, you see, from the best buy."

The way he's playing this old woman makes her sound actually really, really sweet. Man, you'd have to be an absolute scumbag to rip off someone like that. Like, I know that old woman doesn't exist, it's just him playing her, but the story and jokes he's saying in her voice are straight endearing, and this scammer is just willing to take her to the house. Not only that, but he's getting really upset too, haha.
 

so1337

Member
Oct 28, 2017
3,476
Oh man this old woman voice he's doing right now is amazing, haha. The way he phrases things sounds so old timey it makes me laugh.

"I have this old laptop, you see, from the best buy."

The way he's playing this old woman makes her sound actually really, really sweet. Man, you'd have to be an absolute scumbag to rip off someone like that. Like, I know that old woman doesn't exist, it's just him playing her, but the story and jokes he's saying in her voice are straight endearing, and this scammer is just willing to take her to the house. Not only that, but he's getting really upset too, haha.
There's one where the granny talks about her deceased husband who left her a lot of money and the dude on the other end says something like "if you don't want to join your husband, you better give us the money." It's Incredibly fucked up.
 

Necromanti

Member
Oct 25, 2017
11,546
I haven't watched him in a few weeks, but I shouldn't be surprised that there'd be coronavirus-focused scams now.
Oh man this old woman voice he's doing right now is amazing, haha. The way he phrases things sounds so old timey it makes me laugh.

The way he's playing this old woman makes her sound actually really, really sweet. Man, you'd have to be an absolute scumbag to rip off someone like that.
His Edna character/archetype is a treasure. It was what got me into watching his content. The way he conjures up these long, meandering anecdotes is always incredible.
 
Last edited:

ZangBa

Member
Oct 25, 2017
2,040
I like it when he has one of his friends join in as a character, I think his name is Milton. That dude is hilarious.