If what they're doing just produces a placebo effect (something I discovered and shared with everone her on this forum months ago) it is not illegal, but possibly immoral. Although, if it gets the proper effect for people, it's still almost worth paying for if you can't get the same effect without the product. Worse case scenario, they get a credit card chargeback from some users.
If, however, what they're doing is something illegal with the information they gathered about subscribers by selling their information, or illegally charging their credit cards or using the information for fraud, then that's a totally different story. If anyone has any evidence or info that supports this please share it, but so far from my side they gave me my refund as I told everyone months ago and it was applied to my credit card just like they said, and I haven't seen anything "fraudulent" from them.
As for the "personal information", I don't know if it's really that personal. For example name, address, birthday and a CC number. Isn't that information very easy to gather about people? I mean it's not that hard, is it? For example, how hard is it to get the birthdays of people if you really want to? It's pretty easy to get the bdays of people I went to highschool with, or worked with. A lot of people display it on their MySpace or Facebook pages. Anyway, if anyone has any info that they've done anything else with the info they collected please let us know.
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