🚨IMPORTANT UPDATE AVI EISENBERG HAS BEEN CHARGED WITH CSAM POSSESSION. storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.nysd.620227/gov.uscourts.nysd.620227.1.0.pdf
@@andrewjackson244 child sexual abuse material. Its an alternative acronym for child porn, on the basis that adult pornography is consensual and CSAM by definition is, well, sexual abuse of a child.
Forgot where I heard this, but apparently most criminals that get away with crimes always get caught because they talk about how they got away with it.
@@wynnnnnnn5227the issue is that most crime has a shockingly low barrier to entry, meaning you don’t need to be very smart to figure out how to do it. I have no cyber crime experience and don’t plan to ever use this knowledge, but when my credit card info was stolen I spent roughly 2 hours researching how those scammers were able to do it, and am now reasonably confident I could commit credit card fraud in about 5 mins, I’m just smart enough not to. Plenty of people can and have learned those same skills without being smart enough to not use them, or my info wouldn’t have been stolen to begin with.
PSA: It doesn't matter what the contract says. If it is illegal for them to do, they cannot punish you for reporting it to the authorities. So this particular NDA would be unenforceable if they were to say turn this cat into the FBI or the police. It will only protect him from civil lawsuit. And BIG clarification: he isnt innocent, he wasnt charged
This. And I will add on that this also pertains to workplace or school handbooks. They’ll say that they have a right to search your car on their property and that you read in the policy means you understand that. But their little handbook doesn’t supersede the 4th amendment that protects against searches and seizures. May seem random but I’ve encountered this more than you may expect
@@Lucaz99Absolutely baffling how he hasn’t gotten any kind of charge yet, or even a civil suit, ANYTHING. At least that I know of. Dude has scammed so many ppl, run so many very obvious, very clear, seemingly easily tracked (especially with government resources) pump and dump schemes. I guess a lot has to do with SEC not touching most crypto stuff still, but he’s done a lot of other scammy shit. At this point I have no doubt he thinks he’s invincible, and I’d be surprised if he didn’t get caught doing something really dumb and illegal eventually. Whether it’ll be him actually getting real punishment or just having to pay back SOME of his scam $ I don’t know. History tells us it’s usually the latter unfortunately, and it’ll likely be a while, but we’ll see.
Also, IQ isn't a measure of intelligence, it's a measure of your ability to take IQ tests. You could be good at testing and still be a drooling, knuckle-dragging idiot in a lot of aspects of life. Being good at numbers doesn't make you a genius.
seems you are confusing "smart" with intelligence. Intelligence surely does not imply experience or knowledge. Being logically intelligent is often associated with being equally awful in social intelligence. Which is probably why the idiot is bragging about doing crime :D
@@herleikholtan7850 I think what the person is trying to say is just because this guy can solve complex problems, does not mean that he cant have dumb ideas and bad excursions. Overconfidence, lack of some knowledge, lack of experience, lack of self reflection also lack of emotional control. Emotional control could be seen as emotional intelligence that in it self have nothing to do on how well you can solve complex problems unless it makes you distracted. I just think that most people can be super smart, smart and not that smart and dumb in different areas, some smarts matters more in this world.
Theres something so funny and yet stupid about the fact there are people hanging out on discord saying they are going to steal millions - and then actually do it. I remember my friend once stole a Happy Birthday Pikachu Pokémon card from the local shop and that felt like the heist of a century.
@@Meilk27 It's worth a lot of money now. They also stole an Ancient Mew from the same place. (I'm not friends with this person anymore so can't verify what happened to those cards haha)
A bunch of incels that get money suddenly want girls they couldn’t get when they were in high school. It’s the natural path for the loser character traits of a cryptobro.
@@ambersmith2612meh. Generalizations are lazy, and especially subjective ones… Give people the benefit of the doubt and judge people by their own actions- not what **you** suspect about them. That’s the fundamental antithesis of any x-ism.
@@ambersmith2612 there's a lot more people into it, unfortunately, but the more nerdy happen to be the ones tech savvy enough to know how to get ahold of it in any quantity (and thus get caught with it).
But why oh why oh why does this keep happening!?!?!?!??? Everyone wants to make money so badly that they seem to get caught up with fraudulent psychopaths and give them all their money hoping they’re not gonna do what they’re totally gonna do.
I mean, it's not a new phenomenon. I do think the existence of crypto and the wild swings of specifically Bitcoin make people who think they're clever also think they can make a bunch of money. Sometimes they're even right, but sadly they tend to stay in rather than cashing out.
If prostitution was the first industry, being a gaping twat pushing the latest bronze token and shouting about the cavemen’s rights movement was not far behind.
@@jgray2718 Yeah its definitely not new, but crypto is just mysterious and "promising" enough, and tools like Discord can help the scammers be convincing enough, and the barrier to entry is low enough, that this is happening faster than ever. People need to be smart with their money. I made like $500 on btc and that was enough for me, but I will NEVER touch a shitcoin or even anything below like eth, nor should anyone else. Folks need to realize that literally anyone can create a coin, it isn't hard
Fleeing from the Russian mob by going from the US to Israel is like jumping out of the pan and into the fire. The Russian mob has had a big presence in Israel since the 1940s.
At least a quarter of Israelis are Russian and Russian descended....though I consid r as Russian all Russian speakers there even if they were from Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Poland etc.
@@TheNaldiinspecifically for this channel. It wasn't called voidzilla first, that was an organic choice after he kept uploading in "the void", without the aforementioned assets.
In the crypto rounds, he is actually a genius, is amazing how he turned into this criminal. He could have been paid so much money. (not the amount he stole, much less) but way more than the average salary worker. for doing whitehat hacks and finding bugs. few whitehat hackers have gotten legal bounties in the 100s of thousand of dollars
@@izaccy I don't doubt it tbh because it sounds like he was really gifted/skilled at finding these weaknesses in crypto systems. The problem is that he didn't seem to think he'd ever face any repercussions for how he abused that skill 🤷 I mean, publicly documenting the theft you're going to commit the following day is absolutely insane 🤦😂
My guess would be they are investigating where he got it and whether he was connected to people producing it. They don’t want those people on full alert, so delay the charging until they have a more complete picture.
I hadn't even heard about the cheese pizza evidence. That needs to be prosecuted for sure. It would upgrade his prison sentence for sure and maybe they can catch others involved
I don't understand why any of the investors getting pennies on the dollar returned to them would think that any non-investigation agreement would be legally binding. I'd dare that guy to try to enforce the "you can't prosecute or investigate me" agreement in court. The mere existence of the agreement is a tacit admission of guilt.
he is trying to intimidate them, a person who would go back on the "deal" wouldnt take it in the first place, so he loses nothing by trying it. it would be ineffective as a binding cobtract but it isnt as a negotiation tool, since they also get some money back, which would seem to the person who took the deal as a compromise on his part, when he loses nothing and helps him get away with it. this is a common bargaining tactic.
@@jigsaw2253 Its also been repeatedly demonstrated as painfully useless as a measure of intelligence...which the rest of the video proves And unsurprisingly the guy in the video who just assumes high IQ = smart is unsurprisingly not exactly the sharpest tool in the shed himself...
IQ doesn’t measure ego. His IQ is definitely greater than the majority for solving complex problems but he has an ego to boot which drives him to be braggadocious about his actions. It was his ego that sunk him, not his lack of intelligence. He’s an unlovable ginger, of course his desire to be admired outweighed his intelligence lol
Interviewee guy doesn’t seem very knowledgeable about very much. Even he himself said he didn’t really figure the case out by merit or do much to get it prosecuted.
@jasonthompson5624 and we dont equate it. there are many types of intelligence such as emotional and social. being capable of solving elementary school math problems doesn't mean youre capable of holding a conversation.
@@foxbuns Fair enough. But an IQ test is much more than "solving elementary school math problems". Some people minimize the significance of IQ tests, while others act as if it's the end-all be-all. It's neither, but it's definitely an important measure.
I like it that you didn't just take the story and tell it, but brought the guy to tell his story, even if he's not a RU-vidr or anything of the sort. He probably wouldn't even mind if you just relayed your own version, but you went after him to get him to speak for himself. Kudos to you, my dude.
You are the first RU-vidr so far that I have heard use the term CSAM. hope it can be popularize on RU-vid. Feel like it's the most respectful way to talk about that stuff
I sure hope the CSAM charges do come around. It could be he was connected with people producing it and they want to minimally alert those people by holding off until FBI has a lock on them.
The absolute whiplash of how Chris Brunet acts in this interview then clicking on his Substack. Dude's out here writing articles about how it's wrong to prosecute real estate fraud lmao
@@yukiandkanamekuranFor the love of god shut up. If any other ideological group had a website decorated to figured out if websites were “pro-liberalism” you’d piss yourself crying. Stop looking for reasons to be angry and just have a good day for once.
Yep, I keep thinking about all the greyhat stuff he was always doing. Everything was always some sort of loophole but (probably) short of a crime. Like he would buy european packaging/versions & dropship from azUK to azUS & sell on the US product page. But in & out quick & sell thousands of units.
Yes, it is a libertarian thing. Libertarians hate the gov taking their taxes, so money that is not part of the gov is their wet dream. They also hate the age of consent laws. So, most crypto people are probably pedos since they are libertarians.
I’d like to point out the common phrase “innocent until proven guilty” really means “innocent before the law until proven guilty before the law”. Not having been charged / prosecuted does mean he is innocent, before the law. Absolute innocence or guilt of a crime is what it is and does jot depend on any legal proceeding (if you stole $1m from your employer, you’re guilty of stealing, even if no one on earth finds out).
Assuming he’s not the producer or distributor of the CSAM, they are probably going to use the charges for fraud as leverage to get him to roll up the whole ring/group of abusers. Fingers crossed!
You prosecute the fraud before the CSAM for numerous reasons. Nothing says the FBI has to charge everything they will ever charge in the same indictment. You don't want him to pay for his CSAM defense with defrauded money. Also, you don't want to jeopardize the case by introducing something prejudicial which has no relevance to the fraud (at least from what it seems to be).
There's a webcomic called SMBC that had a strip about "Initial Fruit Offerings" (IFOs). Sadly, that featured melons, otherwise I would know where this scammer got his inspiration.
You should start something called “The Coffee League” and it’s a bunch of people getting together to expose scammers, that way you get the fire power to combat these bad actors
What really gets me is that he, at some point, tried to sell a token clearly saying IT'S A SCAM, and he still got hundreds of thousands from his audience. Why would someone do it? Unbelievable.
as long as only ordinary non wealthy people are getting scammed, not much difference to the capitalist economy at large, with the most amount of money being made not by doing any real work or good product or service. that's why there's no real appetite to crack down on tarrot card readers or sellers of stock with imaginary value.
I launched a software with Avi about 7 years ago when he was in the Amazon FBA space. It took just a few weeks for me to realize his brilliance was offset by a severe level of autism that unfortunately made him completely amoral and devoid of ethics or empathy. Quickly cut ties and wasn’t shocked to see this all happen, although shocked it was at this scale. Genius, but also completely socially unaware and might not know right from wrong.
I found you through Chris Brunet, to whom I have subscribed for a couple of years. I hate academic fraud especially, but any kind of lie. Expose these frauds!
In fairness, the one person I know personally with a shockingly high IQ manages to blow up one lab bench a year or so. Because he gets bored waiting for the ethanol to dry and speeds the process along. Did a masters in chemical engineering at an Ivy. He's great at solving problems, not so good at avoiding them in the first place.
IQ means nothing, it's pattern recognition and short term memory recall which requires specific training to administer and evaluate properly. Anyone actually smart doesn't brag their IQ is high
I used to know a "super-genius" with a 180+ IQ who fell for an insurance fraud scam, who had a start-up that failed because he hired friends and spent all his time propping up a scam server, and who also was six figures in hock to the IRS.
@@nathan97531 >it's pattern recognition That's only a small subset of what IQ actually is, and a pretty weak predictor of intelligence at that. You can train someone to be more adept at spotting patterns; you can't actually increase one's g-factor just by training.
Expose them for what? Anyone with a functioning pulse could have told you not to trust Nelk or Stevewilldoit with money even before all of the other shit about them came out
But they can forfeit their rights to sue in civil litigation. However I don't know if it's illegal to compel investors to sign a waiver like that if the cause of reduced refunds is shady activities. It probably is, but I don't really know.
Honestly sounds like they got fruit of the poisonous tree. Might have jumped the gun on the warrant, and now the data can be excluded by the opposing council. Or they just haven't him for it yet and a case. Or they want to use him as an in to a community. Also use csam (abuse material) since pron implies consent which kids cannot give. It is abuse, call it that.
That’s an entirely separate line of investigation, and they aren’t going to say anything publicly while investigating until they are literally bringing charges before the courts.
"...while looking though his files, they found some CP, to put it lightly, in a twist nobody saw..." Are you kidding me? Don't most scammers have that kind of stuff on their computers?
I actually think Mango Markets should also be held accountable for allowing this huge exploit as well. But Avi deserves to be locked up for life if the CP allegations are true. That's an even bigger story.