The Dangers of P2P Arbitration: My Experience with Alexey Larin’s (@alexeylarin) Course
1. Overblown Expectations and False Advertising
Promises of easy earnings and quick success.
Reality: The information is superficial and outdated; the course is designed to attract money rather than provide real education.
2. Lack of Support and Feedback
Promised continuous support from the author and his team.
Reality: After paying for the course, communication with the organizers ceases, and inquiries are ignored.
3. Poor Quality of Materials
Expectation of high-quality educational materials.
Reality: Videos have poor quality, presentations and documents are full of errors, and the information is incomplete or repetitive.
4. Lack of Practical Value
Expectation of practical tools and guides.
Reality: General advice with no specific instructions; little information is applicable in practice.
5. Unrealistic Success Stories and Fake Cases
Success stories of other students in the advertising.
Reality: Most stories are fabricated or exaggerated, and there are very few real successful cases.
6. Overpriced and a Waste of Money
High course price.
Reality: The quality of the course does not justify its cost; free resources may offer more value.
Recommendations for Avoiding Scams
- Research the Information: Before paying for a course, do your research and find reviews.
- Compare Offers: Don’t buy the first course you find; compare it with others.
- Look for Free Resources: Try to find free materials on the topic first.
- Be Skeptical: Easy money and quick success are often just marketing tactics.
Conclusion
My experience with Alexey Larin’s (@alexeylarin) P2P arbitration course highlights the importance of carefully choosing educational materials and being cautious about loud promises of easy money.
The success stories used in the advertising turned out to be exaggerated or completely fictitious.
The information provided in the course is superficial and not detailed enough for practical application.
The author of the course cares more about money than about actually teaching his students.
After completing the course I realized that all the promises were just a marketing ploy. There is little useful information there.
I expected specific tools and strategies, but received only theoretical reasoning.
I do not recommend this course to anyone who is serious about P2P arbitrage.
Instead of the promised practical classes, the entire course consisted of lectures that could be found online.
I learned after the course that it was possible to find much more useful materials for free.
There is no feedback, support does not work – no one answers questions or helps.
Buying this course is one of the biggest disappointments. The lessons do not help to achieve real results.