JustPaste.it

Humble SCAM!!

TRUTH MATTERS!!!! 

Proof that coco46, LethalThom, Mag are same persons (all fictional made up):

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As shown in the screenshots, long-time group members recognize that both posts were originally made by Mag. It’s clear that Mag has been reusing the same account under different names to fabricate characters and boast about fake successes.

We now know that both LethalThom and Coco46 are just aliases of Mag. Interestingly, Humble called out Coco46 for being shady and faking gains, and even claimed to have removed him from the group. But since Coco46 is Mag—and Mag was never removed—it becomes obvious that Humble knows Mag and Coco46 are the same person. (More on this later.)

Next evidence that Humble is Mag:

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In one revealing example, Mag (a.k.a. Coco46) responded to a member’s comment, and when he tried to reply again, he accidentally used his Humble account instead of his Mag alias. In that message, he wrote “I learned from Humble”—while logged in as Humble himself. This mistake clearly exposed that Mag and Humble are the same person.

This is just one of many clues. The reality is: there’s only one person behind all these identitiesHumble. The rest—Mag, Coco46, LethalThom, Pauli, TeslaGod—are fictional characters created to manufacture credibility and post fake trading gains. Humble crafted each persona with its own voice and style to avoid suspicion, but the patterns in language and behavior gave it away.

While Coco and TeslaGod have now been quietly retired, the damage has been done.

What’s troubling is that this isn’t just some internet role-play. Because of Humble’s greedy and reckless actions, people were misled into making real financial decisions. He falsely claimed he had built a proprietary algorithm (more on that below), and encouraged people to buy into IWM/TNA, saying his hedge fund connections were moving in. Many lost tens—and in some cases—hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Despite this, Humble continues to operate under a fake identity, promoting himself as a market genius, billionaire, board member, and someone who’s made hundreds of millions. He promises that others can do the same—an outright lie and a clear case of false advertising. His actions have cost people their hard-earned money, and it’s time for the truth to come out.

Let’s not forget his $10,000 mentorship scam:
He charged more than 20 people $10K each, claiming he would personally teach them the secrets that made him a billionaire. He also promised trade alerts to help them earn back the fee. In reality, those who paid were given basic trading tips easily found on YouTube, and no meaningful alerts were ever shared. The group received nothing of real value, just empty promises.

To add to the deception, characters like Mag and Pauli claimed they had paid $500K to $2M to be mentored by Humble—only to turn around and spam DMs asking others to pay $10K to join the same mentorship. Many of you reading this have likely been contacted by them yourselves.

Next, he claimed that his trend algo is one he created (even told some that his hedge fund tracker and trend algo is being used by big hedge fund firms, that they license his algo) - This is another FRAUD!!

 

In reality, Humble’s so-called “proprietary” trend algorithm is nothing more than a freely available TradingView indicator, complete with open-source code. You can see the original here:

🔗 Mercury PRO by Dr. Abhiram Sivprasad

Adjust these settings like shown below.

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When you compare them side by side (see attached image), it’s clear that Humble’s version is an exact copy—the plots match 100%. The only difference is that he changed a few visual elements, like color schemes and added red/green triangles, to make it look unique.

He claimed this tool was licensed by major hedge funds, but in truth, it’s just repackaged freeware.

Even the “hedge fund tracker” he promotes is just a tweaked version of the RSI indicator—there’s no real hedge fund data available on TradingView. The green/red dots, exhaustion markers, and other visual signals are all features found in many other free indicators with public source code.

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Next evidence: Pauli is also a character created by humble like Mag and others! 

When a now-blocked group member spoke out about the scam, Humble privately messaged him, claiming that it was Pauli—not Humble—who removed him from the group. In that same message, Humble admitted that Pauli and Coco were shady, and said he had done his own research to confirm it. He promised to remove them both from the group—effectively “retiring” those fake personas.

However, since members had started gathering evidence that TeslaGod’s supposed gains were copied from Reddit and WallStreetBets, Humble shifted course. Instead of removing Pauli, he scrapped the TeslaGod character and kept Pauli around—likely because the Pauli persona was still useful for boasting about fake trading success.

Check the screenshot below for proof.

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Pauli's character has been saved to keep bragging gains etc.

 

Next, there’s a post by Humble on Blind, where he claims he’s making $10K a week and asks whether he should quit his job. This directly contradicts what he’s been telling everyone—that he works as an algorithm developer for a hedge fund and has over 20 years of experience in trading and marketing.

Yet, in that same post, he’s fishing for followers on the same Twitter account he currently uses, trying to build a following. Just another example of his inconsistent story and manipulative tactics to draw people into his scam.

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In Conclusion:

This post is to make everyone aware of what’s really going on. At the center of it all is one person—Humble—using multiple fake identities to manipulate the group and build false credibility. These made-up characters were used to post fabricated gains and push a false narrative of market expertise.

The truth is, Humble scrapes information from other Discord groups and forums, repackaging it here as if it were his own insights. He lacks the technical and fundamental market knowledge he constantly claims to have. And the idea that he’s made hundreds of millions from the market is laughable—someone with that kind of wealth wouldn’t be arguing in chat rooms and hustling for subscription fees.

We know who he is. We know what this is.
Please stay cautious and don’t fall for the scam he continues to run.