Is Kagolyn a Scam? Review of the Online Store

Kagolyn located at kagolyn.com is a fake online store. Online users are advised to stay away from the online store because those who shop from it run the risk of receiving counterfeit goods or nothing at all. Unsatisfied online users who have shopped on the untrustworthy website are asked to contact their bank or financial institution to have their transactions canceled and money refunded.

Advertisements
Is Kagolyn a Scam? Review of the Online Store

About Kagolyn Online Store

Kagolyn at kagolyn.com

Email: kagolyn@codsupport.com

Check the comment section below for additional information, share what you know, or ask a question about this article by leaving a comment below. And, to quickly find answers to your questions, use our search Search engine.

Note: Some of the information in samples on this website may have been impersonated or spoofed.

Bookmark articleSave

Was this article helpful?

Advertisements

Comments, Questions, Answers, or Reviews

Comments (Total: 14)

To protect your privacy, please remove sensitive or identifiable information from your comments, questions, or reviews. We will use your IP address to display your approximate location to other users when you make a post. That location is not enough to find you.

Your post will be set as anonymous because you are not signed in. An anonymous post cannot be edited or deleted, therefore, review it carefully before posting. Sign-in.

September 15, 2021 at 7:01 AM by
Is Kagolyn a Scam? Review of the Online Store
an anonymous user from: Brisbane City, South Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

Paid for a four wheel kids bicycle for my grandson and was not delivered in Singapore paid 41 $ no reply. No answer to the phone no . Why did they come on line .

Delete

August 3, 2021 at 5:55 AM by
Is Kagolyn a Scam? Review of the Online Store
an anonymous user from: Greater Manchester, Irlam, England, United Kingdom

Paid for a drift bike and received a cheap bracelet

Delete

August 20, 2021 at 8:45 AM by
Is Kagolyn a Scam? Review of the Online Store
an anonymous user from: Wallaceburg, Chatham-Kent, Ontario, Canada

This happened to me also

Delete

March 30, 2021 at 8:29 PM by
Is Kagolyn a Scam? Review of the Online Store
an anonymous user from: Ampliación Fuentes del Pedregal, Tlalpan, Mexico City, Mexico

I paid and never received the item I asked 😤😡

Delete

March 1, 2021 at 12:07 PM by
Is Kagolyn a Scam? Review of the Online Store
an anonymous user from: East Rand, Germiston, Gauteng, South Africa

I ordered ans never received my item.

Kagolyn us a scam and fake online store

Delete

February 11, 2021 at 1:30 PM by
Is Kagolyn a Scam? Review of the Online Store
an anonymous user from: Grøfthøj, Tranbjerg J, Central Denmark Region, Denmark

I had to contact PayPal to get a tracking number, found the updated Tracking number on my own, but there was no possibility to track the parcel once it reach the destination country, and it has since 2 weeks, but I can't get to know where it is.

PayPal can't either.

They, kagolyn, use a robot app to answer the emails and also on PayPal issue-resolving center.

I warned PayPal about them a few days after I made the purchase as I didn't receive any tracking number and as they answered my email using a standard form, not addressed to me, and not containing my order number, nor any link to their website, nor logo, nor the name of the company, nor the name of the person answering me. Totally anonymous answer.

I ask PayPal to found out if this company was real, the 12 January 2021 already, 4 days after I had made that purchase.

I wasted a lot of time and PayPal is not thorough with this. They could easily have contacted them or found out that it was a fake, especially insight that they have received numerous similar cases with that company.

The name they used on PayPal wasn't the same as the one they use on their website.

They have an IP in Toronto, a phone in Birmanie, and a shipment address in ShanghaI where the parcel was sent.

I had done research on them before I passed my order, but couldn't found any alert anywhere.

On their Facebook account, I had alerted Facebook on the fact that they hide users' comments from each other so that you can only see your own comments and cannot alert others. But I saw the smileys, angry, which meant many had already been there and were not happy. So their comments had been removed.

Now on one of them, you can see 90 comments because their website is closed and they are long gone.

I wonder how come PayPal didn't check that their website had disappeared. I saw it first today.

They advertised on Facebook, which means that it is Facebook's responsibility as they received payment from them.

It is very trash from Facebook to publish ads for a fake company and to don't have closed their account nor written any warning on their account page.

On the ad itself, I ask people posting if anyone had received the product.

But the company was too young.

When I posted warnings, they were removed, and Facebook didn't react to my warning to FB about kagolyn.

It has been 5 weeks and I didn't receive anything.

But the Tracking number shows that it arrived where I live, in Denmark, in my city, 2 weeks ago. I can't found information about it from there.

But was the tracking number real?

I can see from the other comments that they have a one-price system, asking for the same amount of money for anything they sold.

I didn't use their phone number as it is too far away.

Their email is fake.

I don't understand how they could fool PayPal so easily, as their answers are identical, do not address the questions, and repeat themselves.

You can use China post Tracking to track your parcel or package24.com who gives you a detailed tracking in English.

Until your parcel enters your country. After that, you cannot track it.

To obtain the Tracking number you have to go through PayPal and open an issue.

I used PayPal to pay the order, on purpose, in case it was not real, to can retract the payment before 15 days.

But PayPal gives longer time and chose to wait.

I think that they don't do their job and that it's incredible that so many PayPal clients have had the same problem with kagolyn and that they don't seem to know about it.

It's sure that people who received their order are not going to post here. I regret that the person who wrote this article didn't mention wherefrom they know that they send products that are stolen, or false products, as this is unclear.

Do they send it or not?

As I can track the parcel until Europe, until Copenhagen, Denmark, I cannot say that they didn't send anything.

But I regret that postal companies are not more open to how the parcels are registered upon arrival at the airport, and where they store their packages. It has been very difficult for me to found out.

The order confirmation said that it was a premium shipment with 100% traceability.

Which is false.

If you don't receive a tracking number within 48 hours, something is wrong.

Here you have to open a case at PayPal to get it.

They are clever, because, with a tracking number, it looks legitimate until you hear nothing anymore.

And the email address is fake.

You receive a robot answer and I have been talking to a robot for a month.

But they are really shameless to use that robot app to reply on PayPal.

They don't speak English and use an app to answer emails, and questions on PayPal.

They just tell you to wait.

A human will react very differently.

They only have the tracking number valid in China before it is shipped. The number is changed before it leaves Shanghai, a few days after shipment begins, and get an additional number who is its tracking number until it reaches your borders.

But that they don't know it, even as it figures on the transit historic, show that it is not someone working there who answer you but a primitive answering machine, like more and more, have in a chat room, on their website. But here it is to answer your emails and you don't know that you are addressing a cyber machine.

They send an email telling you that it takes 4 to 6 weeks for your parcel to arrive. Very vague and very auto-generated messages.

No specific answer.

Only on PayPal, I was able to get a tracking number and a link to a tracking website called Global, which is not related to them, is in Chinese, and not very specified, while I easily found better and more detailed tracking of my parcel and its transit, in English, by simple Google search.

Once it lands in the USA or Europe, or anywhere else, the Chinese code cannot be used as the system is different here.

Or the company is legit but amateurish on logistic and service client, which made it crash, or it's a fake and therefore everything is f.up.

If it was fake you won't receive anything.

Nobody will.

It will be a good idea for those writing comments to write the date of the order, and how long they waited.

To give an idea.

Have you ordered it 6 or 8 weeks ago, and not received anything, then it's a fake.

It reached Copenhagen, Denmark in 3 weeks. The exact land and city of destination, in 3 weeks. But stay there for 2 weeks, which is weird, but there is a lot of online shopping for months, lots of parcels around, and there is Corona and its restrictions, maybe those 2 factors give more delays. But for the transit China Denmark it was comparatively fast.

The transit inside the airport lasted a week, from when I made the order, then it is shipped to another airport, it takes another week, and send here another week. 3 weeks. But then it's not registered as not having a tracking number, and taken at last, because all other parcels have a tracking number, and come first. That's the system.

Those with tracking number paid more and therefore have priority to parcels non registered with a tracking number.

And in this time where even people with tracking number experience much longer delay than usual, due to the unusually large amount of online orders, and restrictions on the working places and airports, due to covid19, this can explain that.

But I cannot be sure, as nobody helped.

Nor PayPal nor the post system here in Danmark.

Delete

January 31, 2021 at 5:35 PM by
Is Kagolyn a Scam? Review of the Online Store
an anonymous user from: Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, Brazil

I am one of the idiots... bought but did no receive anything

Delete

February 9, 2021 at 5:38 PM by
Is Kagolyn a Scam? Review of the Online Store
an anonymous user from: Antwerp, Mechelen, Flanders, Belgium

yes me too, but I've paid with paypal then I hope to be refunded

Delete

January 25, 2021 at 1:39 PM by
Is Kagolyn a Scam? Review of the Online Store
an anonymous user from: Atlacomulco, Jiutepec, Morelos, Mexico

It is a FAKE! Lost my money with them. 1 month waiting, and they send me nothing at all - paid 45$!

Delete

January 20, 2021 at 12:31 PM by
Is Kagolyn a Scam? Review of the Online Store
an anonymous user from: Mirasierra, Madrid, Community of Madrid, Spain

It's a FAKE! Lost my money with them. 1 month waiting, and they send me a cheap bracelet - paid 45$!

Delete

Write Your Comment, Question, Answer, or Review

Advertisements

Online Threat Alerts Security Tips

Pay the safest way

Credit cards are the safest way to pay for online purchases because you can dispute the charges if you never get the goods or services or if the offer was misrepresented. Federal law limits your liability to $50 if someone makes unauthorized charges to your account, and most credit card issuers will remove them completely if you report the problem promptly.

Guard your personal information

In any transaction you conduct, make sure to check with your state or local consumer protection agency and the Better Business Bureau (BBB) to see if the seller, charity, company, or organization is credible. Be especially wary if the entity is unfamiliar to you. Always call the number found on a website’s contact information to make sure the number legitimately belongs to the entity you are dealing with.

Be careful of the information you share

Never give out your codes, passwords or personal information, unless you are sure of who you're dealing with

Know who you’re dealing with

Crooks pretending to be from companies you do business with may call or send an email, claiming they need to verify your personal information. Don’t provide your credit card or bank account number unless you are actually paying for something and know who you are sending payment to. Your social security number should not be necessary unless you are applying for credit. Be especially suspicious if someone claiming to be from a company with whom you have an account asks for information that the business already has.

Check your accounts

Regularly check your account transactions and report any suspicious or unauthorised transactions.

Don’t believe promises of easy money

If someone claims that you can earn money with little or no work, get a loan or credit card even if you have bad credit, or make money on an investment with little or no risk, it’s probably a scam. Oftentimes, offers that seem too good to be true, actually are too good to be true.

Do not open email from people you don’t know

If you are unsure whether an email you received is legitimate, try contacting the sender directly via other means. Do not click on any links in an email unless you are sure it is safe.

Think before you click

If an email or text message looks suspicious, don’t open any attachments or click on the links.

Verify urgent requests or unsolicited emails, messages or phone calls before you respond

If you receive a message or a phone call asking for immediate action and don't know the sender, it could be a phishing message.

Be careful with links and new website addresses

Malicious website addresses may appear almost identical to legitimate sites. Scammers often use a slight variation in spelling or logo to lure you. Malicious links can also come from friends whose email has unknowingly been compromised, so be careful.

Secure your personal information

Before providing any personal information, such as your date of birth, Social Security number, account numbers, and passwords, be sure the website is secure.

Stay informed on the latest cyber threats

Keep yourself up to date on current scams by visiting this website daily.

Use Strong Passwords

Strong passwords are critical to online security.

Keep your software up to date and maintain preventative software programs

Keep all of your software applications up to date on your computers and mobile devices. Install software that provides antivirus, firewall, and email filter services.

Update the operating systems on your electronic devices

Make sure your operating systems (OSs) and applications are up to date on all of your electronic devices. Older and unpatched versions of OSs and software are the target of many hacks. Read the CISA security tip on Understanding Patches and Software Updates for more information.

What if You Got Scammed?

Stop Contact With The Scammer

Hang up the phone. Do not reply to emails, messages, or letters that the scammer sends. Do not make any more payments to the scammer. Beware of additional scammers who may contact you claiming they can help you get your lost money back.

Secure Your Finances

  • Report potentially compromised bank account, credit or debit card information to your financial institution(s) immediately. They may be able to cancel or reverse fraudulent transactions.
  • Notify the three major credit bureaus. They can add a fraud alert to warn potential credit grantors that you may be a victim of identity theft. You may also want to consider placing a free security freeze on your credit report. Doing so prevents lenders and others from accessing your credit report entirely, which will prevent them from extending credit:

Check Your Computer

If your computer was accessed or otherwise affected by a scam, check to make sure that your anti-virus is up-to-date and running and that your system is free of malware and keylogging software. You may also need to seek the help of a computer repair company. Consider utilizing the Better Business Bureau’s website to find a reputable company.

Change Your Account Passwords

Update your bank, credit card, social media, and email account passwords to try to limit further unauthorized access. Make sure to choose strong passwords when changing account passwords.

Report The Scam

Reporting helps protect others. While agencies can’t always track down perpetrators of crimes against scammers, they can utilize the information gathered to record patterns of abuse which may lead to action being taken against a company or industry.

Report your issue to the following agencies based on the nature of the scam:

  • Local Law Enforcement: Consumers are encouraged to report scams to their local police department or sheriff’s office, especially if you lost money or property or had your identity compromised.
  • Federal Trade Commission: Contact the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) at 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357) or use the Online Complaint Assistant to report various types of fraud, including counterfeit checks, lottery or sweepstakes scams, and more.
  • Identitytheft.gov: If someone is using your personal information, like your Social Security, credit card, or bank account number, to open new accounts, make purchases, or get a tax refund, report it at www.identitytheft.gov. This federal government site will also help you create your Identity Theft Report and a personal recovery plan based on your situation. Questions can be directed to 877-ID THEFT.

How To Recognize a Phishing Scam

Scammers use email or text messages to try to steal your passwords, account numbers, or Social Security numbers. If they get that information, they could get access to your email, bank, or other accounts. Or they could sell your information to other scammers. Scammers launch thousands of phishing attacks like these every day — and they’re often successful.

Scammers often update their tactics to keep up with the latest news or trends, but here are some common tactics used in phishing emails or text messages:

Phishing emails and text messages often tell a story to trick you into clicking on a link or opening an attachment. You might get an unexpected email or text message that looks like it’s from a company you know or trust, like a bank or a credit card or utility company. Or maybe it’s from an online payment website or app. The message could be from a scammer, who might

  • say they’ve noticed some suspicious activity or log-in attempts — they haven’t
  • claim there’s a problem with your account or your payment information — there isn’t
  • say you need to confirm some personal or financial information — you don’t
  • include an invoice you don’t recognize — it’s fake
  • want you to click on a link to make a payment — but the link has malware
  • say you’re eligible to register for a government refund — it’s a scam
  • offer a coupon for free stuff — it’s not real

About Online Threat Alerts (OTA)

Online Threat Alerts or OTA is an anti-cybercrime community that started in 2012. OTA alerts the public to cyber crimes and other web threats.

By alerting the public, we have prevented a lot of online users from getting scammed or becoming victims of cybercrimes.

With the ever-increasing number of people going online, it important to have a community like OTA that continuously alerts or protects those same people from cyber-criminals, scammers and hackers, who are every day finding new ways of carrying out their malicious activities.

Online users can help by reporting suspicious or malicious messages or websites to OTA. And, if they want to determine if a message or website is a threat or scam, they can use OTA's search engine to search for the website or parts of the message for information.

Help maintain Online Threat Alerts (OTA).

Is Kagolyn a Scam? Review of the Online Store