Part 90: AWS Fraud Detector vs Real-World Fraud – The Hypocrisy

22 hours ago
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Amazon Web Services (AWS) proudly promotes its Fraud Detector service — a machine learning tool that claims to stop online scams before they happen. According to AWS, Fraud Detector can flag suspicious payments, block account takeovers, and prevent fake signups using 20+ years of Amazon’s fraud-fighting experience.

But in the real world, AWS servers were used to host the pig-butchering scam platforms Intellisoft.rest and Intellisoft.one. Victims, including myself, lost thousands in cryptocurrency. Abuse reports were filed, evidence was submitted, and regulators were notified. Yet AWS kept billing the criminals while dismissing responsibility, claiming the fraud was “outside U.S. jurisdiction.”

⚠️ This contradiction matters:

AWS sells fraud prevention services while profiting from fraudulent infrastructure.

Victims are told AWS is secure, yet scammers freely operated pig-butchering scams on AWS EC2 servers.

Regulators like the CFTC and DOJ already acknowledge AWS’s role as critical financial infrastructure. If AWS is trusted for government contracts, it must also protect ordinary victims.

This video exposes the hypocrisy: AWS cannot market itself as a leader in fraud prevention while ignoring real fraud running on its own platform. Victims deserve accountability. Regulators must act.

This is Part 90 of the Justice DIY series — documenting AWS negligence, connecting it to systemic fraud, and showing why victims must fight back.

👉 Full AWS Fraud Detector page: aws.amazon.com/fraud-detector

👉 Follow me on YouTube for more: youtube.com/@JusticeDIY

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