OP 08 July, 2025 - 09:00 PM
(This post was last modified: 08 July, 2025 - 10:10 PM by BossOfBosses. Edited 3 times in total.)
Scammers Profile Link: https://cracked.sh/CatProxies
Sales Thread: https://cracked.sh/Thread-Supreme-%E2%9A...S%E2%9A%A1
Amount or Item(s) Scammed: 7500 EUR
Screenshots of Communication:
![[Image: 0YJgEsI.png]](https://i.imgur.com/0YJgEsI.png)
Additional Information:
Hey, I’m @Infinitillionaire, and I’ve been offering services on Cracked for over 5+ years now.
Throughout this time, I’ve completed countless successful projects with over 6 figures in value and have never faced a situation complicated enough to warrant such a scam report until now. Unfortunately, this report concerns a reputable seller, @CatProxies, the owner of www.catproxies.com.
Summary
I’ve been working with @CatProxies for over half a year, providing a wide range of services including Figma design, Photoshop editing, front-end development & back-end development.
Everything had gone smoothly up until recently. So much so that we agreed on a monthly payment plan of 4000 EUR for a continuous stream of updates and improvements to his site, handled by a team of 3 designers/developers.
We completed and were paid for Month #1 and Month #2 of this ongoing contract. However, when it came time to collect payment for Months #3 and #4 (May and June), the client suddenly began refusing payment, offering excuses that, frankly, do not make sense.
It appears that once the unpaid amount reached a significant total, the client decided to lock us out of the systems and walk away with both the work and the money. He has confirmed that he is now hiring a different developer, and all system passwords have been changed including server, admin panel, etc. just before denying payment. Changing all the password just further confirms this whole situation was created on purpose.
Details
CatProxies created a new ticket with us at Paxerr (our agency) on February 22, 2025, at 1:43 PM, requesting an estimate for a list of development tasks.
![[Image: MAIUZ2C.png]](https://i.imgur.com/MAIUZ2C.png)
![[Image: q9oAe8d.png]](https://i.imgur.com/q9oAe8d.png)
![[Image: Xd2gRW3.png]](https://i.imgur.com/Xd2gRW3.png)
![[Image: xlxbktY.png]](https://i.imgur.com/xlxbktY.png)
![[Image: o5KRxsE.png]](https://i.imgur.com/o5KRxsE.png)
As you can see, we clearly stated that all provided estimates were approximate. Given the size and complexity of the requested tasks, it was impossible to provide exact pricing or deadlines. The client acknowledged and accepted this:
![[Image: LdSM7W1.png]](https://i.imgur.com/LdSM7W1.png)
We agreed on 4000 EUR/month to work through his task list with a team of 3. Work began immediately, and the first two months were completed and paid.
As Month #3 approached, we fell behind the initial estimates primarily due to:
Despite these challenges, I aimed to meet the original deployment timeline. By the end of May, we were nearly done and began preparing the live deployment.
Unfortunately, during this process, the production environment’s differences (e.g., database structure, OS, modules, etc.) caused a site-wide crash that lasted over 72 hours. We take responsibility for the downtime and immediately began working around the clock (literally until 6 AM for two nights to restore functionality).
Sales eventually resumed as we stabilized the core systems, although many bugs remained due to the full system overhaul.
This dragged our bug-fixing efforts well into June. Given the inconvenience caused, we offered the client a 500 EUR discount on May’s invoice as a gesture of goodwill.
Despite our ongoing work and cooperation, we later requested payment for May and June.
His response:
![[Image: y8j19qZ.png]](https://i.imgur.com/y8j19qZ.png)
![[Image: sscQUsv.png]](https://i.imgur.com/sscQUsv.png)
Shortly after these messages, we realized all access credentials had been changed including admin panel, server access, etc. There would be no reason to revoke access unless he had already decided not to pay. If he had legitimate issues with our work, he could have simply addressed them while maintaining communication and access.
Additional Context
Conclusion & Payment Request
CatProxies owes us 8000 EUR for May and June. After the 500 EUR discount offered for the May downtime, the final owed amount is:
7,500 EUR (≈ 8,776.50 USDT)
All previous payments were made via USDT on BNB Chain, so here is our wallet address for the payment:
0x1c4e73fe7a8b5acd5b7f24e32c45eb9fdcf95306
We are fully transparent and cooperative and are happy to provide additional evidence upon request.
Thank you for your time. — @Infinitillionaire / Paxerr Agency
Crypto address for a refund: (USDT BNB) - 0x1c4e73fe7a8b5acd5b7f24e32c45eb9fdcf95306
Sales Thread: https://cracked.sh/Thread-Supreme-%E2%9A...S%E2%9A%A1
Amount or Item(s) Scammed: 7500 EUR
Screenshots of Communication:
![[Image: 0YJgEsI.png]](https://i.imgur.com/0YJgEsI.png)
Additional Information:
Hey, I’m @Infinitillionaire, and I’ve been offering services on Cracked for over 5+ years now.
Throughout this time, I’ve completed countless successful projects with over 6 figures in value and have never faced a situation complicated enough to warrant such a scam report until now. Unfortunately, this report concerns a reputable seller, @CatProxies, the owner of www.catproxies.com.
Summary
I’ve been working with @CatProxies for over half a year, providing a wide range of services including Figma design, Photoshop editing, front-end development & back-end development.
Everything had gone smoothly up until recently. So much so that we agreed on a monthly payment plan of 4000 EUR for a continuous stream of updates and improvements to his site, handled by a team of 3 designers/developers.
We completed and were paid for Month #1 and Month #2 of this ongoing contract. However, when it came time to collect payment for Months #3 and #4 (May and June), the client suddenly began refusing payment, offering excuses that, frankly, do not make sense.
It appears that once the unpaid amount reached a significant total, the client decided to lock us out of the systems and walk away with both the work and the money. He has confirmed that he is now hiring a different developer, and all system passwords have been changed including server, admin panel, etc. just before denying payment. Changing all the password just further confirms this whole situation was created on purpose.
Details
CatProxies created a new ticket with us at Paxerr (our agency) on February 22, 2025, at 1:43 PM, requesting an estimate for a list of development tasks.
![[Image: MAIUZ2C.png]](https://i.imgur.com/MAIUZ2C.png)
![[Image: q9oAe8d.png]](https://i.imgur.com/q9oAe8d.png)
![[Image: Xd2gRW3.png]](https://i.imgur.com/Xd2gRW3.png)
![[Image: xlxbktY.png]](https://i.imgur.com/xlxbktY.png)
![[Image: o5KRxsE.png]](https://i.imgur.com/o5KRxsE.png)
As you can see, we clearly stated that all provided estimates were approximate. Given the size and complexity of the requested tasks, it was impossible to provide exact pricing or deadlines. The client acknowledged and accepted this:
![[Image: LdSM7W1.png]](https://i.imgur.com/LdSM7W1.png)
We agreed on 4000 EUR/month to work through his task list with a team of 3. Work began immediately, and the first two months were completed and paid.
As Month #3 approached, we fell behind the initial estimates primarily due to:
- Unforeseen technical issues
- Scope changes
- Newly requested features that were not part of the original plan
Despite these challenges, I aimed to meet the original deployment timeline. By the end of May, we were nearly done and began preparing the live deployment.
Unfortunately, during this process, the production environment’s differences (e.g., database structure, OS, modules, etc.) caused a site-wide crash that lasted over 72 hours. We take responsibility for the downtime and immediately began working around the clock (literally until 6 AM for two nights to restore functionality).
Sales eventually resumed as we stabilized the core systems, although many bugs remained due to the full system overhaul.
This dragged our bug-fixing efforts well into June. Given the inconvenience caused, we offered the client a 500 EUR discount on May’s invoice as a gesture of goodwill.
Despite our ongoing work and cooperation, we later requested payment for May and June.
His response:
![[Image: y8j19qZ.png]](https://i.imgur.com/y8j19qZ.png)
![[Image: sscQUsv.png]](https://i.imgur.com/sscQUsv.png)
Shortly after these messages, we realized all access credentials had been changed including admin panel, server access, etc. There would be no reason to revoke access unless he had already decided not to pay. If he had legitimate issues with our work, he could have simply addressed them while maintaining communication and access.
Additional Context
- We are happy to provide full logs or add a forum staff member to the Discord ticket where more than 3 months of discussions took place.
- There is ample evidence showing how many out-of-scope tasks were added, which naturally extended our timeline.
- It’s important to clarify: this was a monthly retainer, not a fixed-scope, fixed-deadline project. If it were, we would have required full upfront payment for a fixed deliverable.
Conclusion & Payment Request
CatProxies owes us 8000 EUR for May and June. After the 500 EUR discount offered for the May downtime, the final owed amount is:
7,500 EUR (≈ 8,776.50 USDT)
All previous payments were made via USDT on BNB Chain, so here is our wallet address for the payment:
0x1c4e73fe7a8b5acd5b7f24e32c45eb9fdcf95306
We are fully transparent and cooperative and are happy to provide additional evidence upon request.
Thank you for your time. — @Infinitillionaire / Paxerr Agency
Crypto address for a refund: (USDT BNB) - 0x1c4e73fe7a8b5acd5b7f24e32c45eb9fdcf95306