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Essential15-20 minLesson 5Scam Check

Why FxRobotEasy Is Different — Apply Lesson 4 to Us

A self-audit walkthrough. Lesson 4 taught the 5-stage verification protocol; this lesson runs it against FxRobotEasy with the URLs you can audit. No 'trust us' — the whole point is that you don't have to.

Last reviewed: 2026-05-20

Choose your reading depth — content adapts, URL stays the same.
This course is being reworked. The lesson below is the v1 draft; we're rewriting Scam Check with a friendlier, less alarmist voice. New version coming soon.
Quick answer
FxRobotEasy is a software vendor selling Expert Advisors for MetaTrader 5 — we do NOT custody client funds (the Ponzi mechanic from Lesson 2 is structurally impossible), do NOT promise guaranteed returns (Lesson 1’s #1 red flag), publish a public live-trade feed and per-bot equity curves at /results, expose a read-only signals API anyone can audit, and disclose our newer-entity status (founded 2021, public since 2025) instead of hiding it. This lesson walks through the 5-stage protocol from Lesson 4 against us, with the URLs you can verify yourself.
This lesson is a worked example, not a sales pitch
You learned the 5-stage verification protocol abstractly in Lesson 4. This lesson is the same protocol run against one specific firm (us) with publishable URLs, so you can see what a project structured to pass it actually looks like. Apply the same protocol to every firm — including us — before depositing anywhere.
TL;DR — 60 sec

6 honesty signals · 60 seconds

  • ✅ No custody — funds stay with your broker (Ponzi-proof by structure)
  • ✅ No guaranteed returns — drawdowns published alongside returns
  • ✅ Public live trade feed at /results (broker-sourced, not screenshots)
  • ✅ Open signals API — anyone can audit signal stream independently
  • ✅ Named team with public LinkedIn profiles (Lesson 4 Stage 3 ready)
  • ✅ Disclosed newness — < 5 years public-facing, said outright
60-sec self-audit: open /about, /results, and api.fxroboteasy.com/v1/signals. Walk away if any of them are empty or returns no real data.
Standard lesson body

Run the L4 protocol against us

Five stages, our published answer to each, the typical scam contrast, and our honest caveats. Audit the URLs yourself — the point is that you can.

1Stage 1 — Identity
Who is the legal entity, and who owns it?
FxRobotEasy

FxRobotEasy publishes a single registered legal entity, named team members with public profiles, and our company history (founded 2021, public development since 2025). We are a relatively new public-facing entity, which we disclose explicitly rather than hide — this is itself part of how the verification protocol works.

About + team
Typical scam

A typical scam shows a marketing brand only — no registered entity, hidden UBO behind offshore shells, no public team profiles.

Honest caveat

We are < 5 years old as a public-facing entity. Apply the same heightened scrutiny you would to any newer firm: smaller deposit sizes, demo-first, and stop scaling at the first failed expectation.

2Stage 2 — Regulatory posture
What jurisdiction, what scope, what disclosures?
FxRobotEasy

We disclose our jurisdiction and the regulatory framework that applies to our products (software vendor providing Expert Advisors for MetaTrader 5, not a broker, not a fund). We do NOT custody client funds — funds always stay with the user's own regulated broker. This is the single most important structural difference from the schemes in Lesson 2.

Legal / disclosures
Typical scam

A typical scam claims a Tier-1 regulator that doesn't list them, OR cites an offshore regulator that doesn't actually regulate forex (Saint Vincent / Vanuatu / Marshall Islands).

Honest caveat

A software vendor selling EAs is regulated less stringently than a broker or fund. This means our regulatory disclosure is shorter than a broker's — and your protection comes primarily from the broker you choose to connect to.

3Stage 3 — Team
Are the people behind it real and verifiable?
FxRobotEasy

Our team page lists named individuals with linked public profiles and prior-work history. Reverse-image-search any headshot; cross-check claimed prior employers on LinkedIn. We invite this — it is the whole point of publishing the page.

Team profiles
Typical scam

A typical scam uses stock-photo headshots, claims unverifiable 'ex-Goldman Sachs' credentials, runs LinkedIn profiles < 6 months old.

4Stage 4 — Track record
Is performance independently auditable?
FxRobotEasy

We publish a public live-trade feed and per-bot performance pages with full equity curves, drawdown, and trade history. The feed is read-only and refreshes from the live broker accounts running our EAs. You can review every trade — wins and losses — without an account on our platform.

Public results / live trade feed
Typical scam

A typical scam refuses any third-party tracker (claims 'protecting strategy'), publishes only edited screenshots, or shows a self-hosted dashboard that the firm itself controls.

Honest caveat

Live performance varies by bot, by broker conditions (spread / swap / slippage), and by market regime. Our published live results include drawdowns — sometimes large ones — because that's what real trading looks like. Smooth curves were the diagnostic in Lesson 3 for fabrication.

5Stage 5 — Community signal
What does the global retail community say?
FxRobotEasy

We engage publicly on Reddit, Trustpilot, and trader forums under the brand name. Critical reviews are NOT removed; we respond with specific factual answers and ask the reviewer to update their post if the issue is resolved. The public AI Signals service (Phase 1a deployed) gives any developer read-only API access to verify our signal claims independently — see api.fxroboteasy.com/v1/signals.

AI Signals public API
Typical scam

A typical scam threatens negative reviewers with lawyer letters, buys 5-star review bursts, and refuses public API access to any tracker.

Six structural honesty signals

Each signal directly defeats a scheme from earlier lessons. The reason we publish them isn’t marketing — it’s that ‘trust’ isn’t a transferable property in finance, and verifiable structure is.

1. We do NOT custody client funds.

Funds stay with the user's own regulated broker. The Ponzi mechanic from Lesson 2 is structurally impossible — we can't pay 'old depositors' from 'new depositors' because deposits never come to us.

2. We do NOT promise guaranteed or fixed returns.

Per Lesson 1, the #1 red flag is guaranteed-return language. We explicitly publish drawdown numbers alongside returns — because that's what real trading produces.

3. Public live trade feed, broker-sourced.

Per Lesson 4 Stage 4, the diagnostic of a real track record is third-party-auditable performance. We publish ours.

4. Open public API for the AI Signals service.

Per Lesson 2 (Signal Inflation scheme), the diagnostic is refusal of third-party tracking. We publish a read-only API anyone can poll.

5. Named team with public profiles.

Per Lesson 4 Stage 3, real people with verifiable prior work history are the only credible signal that a project has skin in the game.

6. We disclose our age (< 5 years public-facing) instead of hiding it.

Per Lesson 4 Stage 1, registration date is a verification input. Hiding it would be a red flag; disclosing it lets readers apply appropriate caution.

Key terms

Definition
Custody (in trading)
The legal arrangement under which client funds are held. Brokers and funds custody client funds (with accompanying regulatory obligations and segregation rules). Software vendors do not — the user keeps funds with their own broker and only the trading instructions come from the vendor. No-custody structures eliminate entire scam-mechanic families (Ponzi, withdrawal-trap, custody fraud).
Definition
Verifiable performance
A track record that an independent third party can audit without permission from the firm — typically via a read-only broker-API connection (Myfxbook, FX Blue, or a public live-trade feed). Verifiable performance is structurally different from screenshots and self-hosted dashboards, which the firm controls and can edit.

Independent practice — contrast worked through

Three explicit contrasts between FxRobotEasy and the schemes from Lesson 2. The point isn’t self-promotion — it’s identifying which structural difference defeats which scheme so you can apply the same logic to any other firm.

Contrast 1 — Ponzi vs no-custody software vendor

Ponzi requires the operator to hold deposits. FxRobotEasy never holds deposits — funds stay with your broker. The mechanic is structurally impossible. Lesson: if a firm doesn’t hold your money, the Ponzi family is out.

Contrast 2 — Signal inflation vs public API

Signal-inflation schemes ban third-party tracking. FxRobotEasy publishes a read-only public API anyone can poll. Lesson: a public API means the operator doesn’t control what you measure.

Contrast 3 — Smooth-curve fabrication vs published drawdowns

Scams hide drawdowns. FxRobotEasy’s /results page publishes drawdowns — including occasional large ones — because that’s what real strategies produce. Lesson: visible drawdown is itself a credibility signal.

Apply — audit us in 15 minutes

Real-world task
Don’t take this lesson’s word for anything. Open the URLs above in tabs and run the 5-stage protocol from Lesson 4 against FxRobotEasy. Note any gaps between what we publish and what the protocol asks for. Record findings in the journal below — including anything that disappointed you.
How FxRobotEasy public track record handles this

Manual: apply Lesson 4’s 5-stage protocol to every firm before depositing.

Our reference: the entire lesson above IS the demonstration — we’ve linked the specific pages (about, legal, results) where the audit happens. There is nothing to ‘trust’ — either the artefacts exist when you click, or they don’t.

When manual wins: always. Run the audit on every firm — including ours — and document findings publicly when something is wrong.

Verifiable live trades + audit history — what an honest offer looks like.
See live results →

Mastery check

Seven questions on what makes our structure verifiable and why each honesty signal corresponds to a specific scheme from earlier lessons. Pass at 6 of 7 (~ 80 %).

Why FxRobotEasy Mastery Quiz

Test your understanding with 7 questions. Pass with 6/7 correct.

Reflect

Reflection

Type your honest answers — saved on this device only. Use them next week to spot patterns in your trading thinking.

Pro deep dive

Structural design notes

Why a software-vendor model instead of a broker / fund?Pro

A software vendor doesn’t custody client funds, doesn’t intermediate market access, and doesn’t carry the regulatory burden of a broker or fund. That is intentional: it eliminates large scam-mechanic families (Ponzi, withdrawal-trap, NAV-fabrication) by design rather than by promise. The trade-off is that we earn less per user than a custodial model would — which we accept because structural honesty has compounding value over time.

Why disclose newness rather than hide it?Pro

Lesson 4 Stage 1 names registration date as a verification input. Hiding it would be flagged by a careful auditor and would damage trust permanently if discovered. Disclosing it upfront lets readers apply appropriate caution and prevents anyone from feeling deceived later. It’s structurally safer for both sides.

Why publish drawdowns prominently?Pro

Per Lesson 3, smooth equity curves are diagnostic of fabrication. Showing real volatility (including losses) is the only credible way to publish performance. The cost is shorter-term marketing impact (numbers look less impressive than competitors’ cherry-picked screenshots); the benefit is that anyone who runs Lesson 4’s Stage 4 test on us actually finds what we said they would.

Trade-offs of full transparencyPro

Transparency raises the bar on what we can say in marketing. We cannot run a “guaranteed returns” ad campaign, cannot post cherry-picked monthly wins without their context, and cannot hide bad months. As a result, our growth curve is slower than typical scams during bull markets — and steadier through drawdowns. This is the intended trade-off.

Open invitation

If you find any artefact on our site that doesn’t match what this lesson claims — or any gap between what the L4 protocol asks for and what we publish — document it (screenshot + URL + date) and report it publicly:

  • • Telegram support: @fxroboteasyteambot
  • • Email: support@fxroboteasy.com
  • • Public: Forex Peace Army , Trustpilot , Reddit r/Forex.

Public reporting forces public response — which is how the transparency system is supposed to work.

Recall card — review in 1 week
Name 3 structural honesty signals FxRobotEasy publishes, and which scheme family from Lesson 2 each one defeats.
Show answer

(1) No custody of client funds — defeats Ponzi/HYIP (Scheme 1, requires holding deposits). (2) Public live-trade feed at /results — defeats signal inflation (Scheme 3, requires hidden tracking) AND smooth-curve fabrication (Lesson 3). (3) Open read-only signals API — defeats signal inflation (Scheme 3, requires third-party-tracker refusal). Bonus: named team with LinkedIn profiles defeats mentor-fraud (Scheme 2, requires fake or unverifiable team).

Next: Your Protection Toolkit

Educational material only — not investment advice. Trading carries risk of capital loss. Always practice on demo and use a stop-loss. ← Back to Scam Check