Clicking a “like” button on a smartphone used to mean showing appreciation for a video.
Now, that simple digital tap represents a financial trap that is draining the life savings of unsuspecting Chicago families.
The dream of easy money from the comfort of a living room couch turned into a nightmare for residents in the Westhaven Park neighborhood.
Fraudsters operating under the banner of an Australian company called CloudBoost Technology Advertising lured locals into a high-stakes trap disguised as a modern marketing firm.
The pitch sounded incredibly simple, enticing, and perfect for the digital age.
Workers would receive daily payments just for liking videos and photos on various social media platforms.

Here is the reality of how the trap snapped shut.
Several broken investors shared their stories with ABC7 investigators in hopes of exposing the international network.
Erica Tyler wanted to build a better financial future for her household on the Near West Side.
She heard about the seemingly lucrative opportunity from a trusted friend and immediately jumped into the program.
Tyler quickly fell in love with the process, pouring her heart and soul into creating presentations and recruiting new members across the city.
The system felt legitimate at first because the platform actually paid out small amounts of money during the early stages.
To unlock higher earning potentials and secure more daily tasks, the company forced Tyler to deposit $500 in cryptocurrency as a baseline entrance fee.
That initial payment was just the first step down a very dark financial rabbit hole.
The company used psychological tricks to convince workers that they needed to buy into higher employment tiers to maximize their income.
Tyler eventually funneled an astronomical $15,000 into the cryptocurrency platform over the course of a single year.
Her husband, Willie Tyler Jr., trusted the system because he trusted his wife, leading him to invest his own money into the digital platform.
The couple even extended the opportunity to their close friend, Chris Kimbrough, who lived out in suburban Bolingbrook.
Kimbrough believed in the pitch so much that she gathered cash from family members and friends to fund her own advancement through the corporate ranks.
The scene told a different story last August when the entire digital empire suddenly evaporated into thin air.
The website vanished, user dashboards froze, and the company completely locked the victims out of their accounts.
Tyler estimates her total personal and computational losses at nearly $37,000.
Her husband watched $3,000 of his hard-earned money disappear instantly into the digital void.
The financial hit crippled the household budget and damaged deep personal relationships across the neighborhood.
“Put me in a hole,” Willie Tyler Jr. said, his voice carrying the heavy weight of a man who accidentally led his loved ones into financial ruin.
The pain echoes far beyond the borders of Cook County.
Gwendoline Ashford ran a massive recruitment pipeline out of Georgia, managing a digital team of over 120 eager workers.
Many of those frantic workers now falsely believe Ashford stole their money, even though she lost $27,000 of her own savings when the company collapsed.
Ashford remembers when the firm threw massive promotional parties in Atlanta and Alabama, giving people cash bonuses to open physical offices and film promotional videos.
Now, Ashford is fighting back by launching an online petition to unite the thousands of victims scattered across the country.
Terrified victims have flooded the FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center and the U.S. Secret Service with official fraud reports.
Federal authorities in the Chicago Field Office are actively tracking these digital footprints and trying to warn the public before the next scam launches.
Peter Vogl, the Assistant Special Agent in Charge at the Chicago Secret Service office, analyzes these complex cyber crimes daily.
Vogl notes that the requirement to pay upfront cash to progress within a company is the ultimate red flag for any job seeker.
Legitimate employers pay their workers for labor rather than demanding investments to unlock basic daily assignments.
The Better Business Bureau confirms that task-based income offers are exploding across the internet, targeting vulnerable people who need flexible income.
Scam artists use the anonymity of cryptocurrency to hide their identities and move stolen funds across international borders instantly.
Attempts to reach CloudBoost Technology Advertising yield nothing but dead silence and digital dead ends.
The Australian Securities and Investments Commission still lists the business as registered in Sydney, but the corporate phone lines are completely dead.
Local investigators called multiple management numbers and left urgent messages for the company leaders, but no one ever called back.
The emotional toll on the victims is just as severe as the financial devastation.
Kimbrough admits she feels deeply embarrassed by the situation, acknowledging that the opportunity simply looked too good to be true.
The Tyler family is now left to rebuild their finances and restore the trust they lost within their own social circles.
Chicago residents must remember one golden rule when searching for employment in an increasingly digital world.
You should never have to pay money out of your own pocket just to do your job.
Community Safety Toolkit
Red Flags of Task-Based Scams
1.The Pay-to-Work Demand: Any job that requires you to deposit cryptocurrency, buy gift cards, or send wire transfers to “unlock” work.
2.The Recruitment Push: High-pressure tactics forcing you to recruit friends and family members to move up in “tiers.”
3. Guaranteed High Returns: Promises of massive daily income for simple, low-skill digital actions like clicking links or liking videos.
What To Do If You Are Scammed
1. Stop Communicating: Break off all contact with the platform managers immediately.
2. Document Everything: Take screenshots of all chat logs, transaction histories, user dashboards, and deposit addresses.
3. File Federal Reports: Submit all evidence directly to the FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) and the U.S. Secret Service.











