Beware: Counterfeit Intel CPU Scam on Used Market

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  • Опубликовано: 13 окт 2024

Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @GamersNexus
    @GamersNexus  Год назад +125

    Find our recent i5-13400F CPU review over here! ruclips.net/video/AdvWGEzYqg4/видео.html

    • @henrythegreatamerican8136
      @henrythegreatamerican8136 Год назад

      I often wonder if AMD and INTEL create these scam secondary markets to scare people into buying the real thing at inflated new prices.

    • @DethNade
      @DethNade Год назад +1

      DO they have somthing like this for AMD? i would love to see if my CPU is real.

    • @KavorkaDesigns
      @KavorkaDesigns Год назад +1

      How to correctly reset a fake drive to its correct size? I used to have a tool(a GUI app) I came across on a forum I blv, I think it was made for SD cards at the time but do believe it also worked for harddrives as well iirc, it allowed me to edit things that the WinOS can't see, even under Linux it wasn't possible. No idea what it was called( I faintly recall just a few of the Chinese symbols and maybe a couple digits in the title). -Have you heard of this or used such? I think you should cover it in a video.. I should have a copy here but I have 25yrs of data hording, randomly fit onto drives as space was needed, many files corrupted, another great idea, how to properly restore data(i.e. repair data-streams/file-types, or have you covered it lately?.. I'm only as of late started folder naming, dating, and attempting to sort & properly store the data, but may be awhile before I find the items I want. Thnx in advance

    • @Justacapybara9000
      @Justacapybara9000 Год назад +4

      You're a good man for just accepting the scam product from a viewer you probably made his year 500$ is not a small amount

    • @Satou-Akira71
      @Satou-Akira71 Год назад

      thx for the tip will improve my counterfeits immediately

  • @clansome
    @clansome Год назад +510

    2022 - "Unlaunched" enters the vocabulary
    2023 - "Unscammed" enters the vocabulary
    Nice one Steve.

    • @contra1124
      @contra1124 Год назад +50

      Thanks, Steve. Back to you, Steve.

    • @mikeh6286
      @mikeh6286 Год назад +7

      Thank you Papa.......

    • @josefmazzeo6628
      @josefmazzeo6628 Год назад +1

      Probably one of the few times in human history someone has been "unscammed" ...and still trying to figure out how you can unlaunch something.

    • @clansome
      @clansome Год назад +1

      @@josefmazzeo6628 If it's not actually launched it can be unlaunched. It's the opposite of these announcements of announcements of launches that we've been getting these last few years.
      Maybe that's why they do them so they have the opportunity to walk back the launch if needed.

  • @iancurrie8844
    @iancurrie8844 Год назад +2600

    TWIST: there was no original scammer and the guy you paid $500 to is the actual scammer.

  • @Makerr8
    @Makerr8 Год назад +971

    Another tip: if you request a photo of the CPU, do a reverse image search of the picture they send. If it comes back with a source, you know they're trying to scam you.

    • @Jammermaker
      @Jammermaker Год назад +91

      For almost anything you're buying online that's a good trick to know.

    • @IRefuseToUseThisStupidFeature
      @IRefuseToUseThisStupidFeature Год назад +30

      @@Jammermaker Though sometimes they are selling the real thing but just stole images because people are lazy.

    • @pirojfmifhghek566
      @pirojfmifhghek566 Год назад +145

      "Wait a second... this source image is _my_ CPU... and _my house."_

    • @flyingtentacle7631
      @flyingtentacle7631 Год назад +22

      Either that or they just cbf to play silly games with you. I always use google images when people request more images for things I have listed on local market places. Like, fuck, I'm way too lazy to take more pics for some random guy on craigslist who probably can't afford to buy anything until his next paycheck anyways.
      Just meet up at a local PC shop and either bring your computer with you, or pay the shop to test it. They will absolutely have no problem doing this, and don't charge much for it.

    • @NegativeROG
      @NegativeROG Год назад +4

      VERY good idea. Wish I'd thought of that. Three thumbs up.

  • @Misaka15539
    @Misaka15539 Год назад +378

    There is another method of doing this: IHS swapping. They would buy, say a 12900K from a retailer and get a cheapo CPU like G6900 somewhere else, swap their IHSs, then return the G6900 as the 12900k, and profit from it. It happened as far back as 2014 in China on a retail site called JD. They changed their return policy after this and Intel was involved as well so I suspect that's when they added the validation check.

    • @IronArmPanda
      @IronArmPanda Год назад +57

      People do the same thing with GPUS on Amazon, switch coolers and stickers and return for profit. A couple years ago I bought a new GTX 980ti and it turned out to be a 970, gonna guess it was a restock on a scam return.

    • @PDXCustomPCS
      @PDXCustomPCS Год назад +18

      @@IronArmPanda Amazon will also block the hell out of you ever shopping with them again if you get caught. Guess you can use mommy's CC and address if the scammer has moved out. 😆

    • @U1TR4F0RCE
      @U1TR4F0RCE Год назад +23

      I believe that was also done with AMD cpus a while back as there was a Linus Tech Tips video about someone having that happen to them.

    • @drkirbkennethkirby7634
      @drkirbkennethkirby7634 Год назад +3

      I used to do this to wal mart/best buy with 360s I couldn't fix the red ring on. Found a way to open without damaging the seal, and could reattach it easily

    • @a120068020
      @a120068020 Год назад +4

      I suppose you wouldn't always have to return if you, as a scammer, wanted a i9 12900k but didn't care what was on the IHS - you could swap it with a G6900 and sell the fake 12900k with the swapped IHS - get a huge part of your cost covered by the scam... off to buy a couple of CPUs thanks for the idea ;)

  • @asm_nop
    @asm_nop Год назад +210

    A couple minor corrections at 12:15. The S-Spec codes are alphanumeric, and there can be several codes for a particular CPU model. Engineering sample chips are 4-digits, production CPUs are 5-digits. The S-Spec gets changed if there is a revision of the silicon. For example: the i9-9900KF is SRFAA or SRG1A for production, and QRK0 or QRN6 for engineering samples.
    CPU-World is a great web resource for this.

    • @meatbleed
      @meatbleed Год назад +15

      Glad intel was able to keep it simple

    • @TricksterRad
      @TricksterRad Год назад +3

      @@meatbleed to be fair, you the customer usually are more interested in the 9900KF part, and less in the SRFAA/SRG1A part.

  • @RylTheValstrax
    @RylTheValstrax Год назад +74

    I've seen videos on 'fake' AMD cpus, where they would delid a broken cpu (usually one with destroyed pins) and then attach the lid to a cheap cpu and sell it for a profit. Theres also a couple of other cases where they used really old or intel cpus with a ryzen cpu 'sticker' on top... including one "threadripper" that was made out of 4 old intel cpus shoved into a threadripper box and then returned to amazon.

    • @RiceCrustyTreat
      @RiceCrustyTreat Год назад +1

      That doesn't sound right. If it's broken and they're swapping it w the same CPU why would they need to swap the ihs if they're selling the broken one anyways. Plus anyone should be looking at the pins of a cou before purchasing...

    • @rata536
      @rata536 Год назад

      @@RiceCrustyTreat 1) Buy cheap destroyed CPU (Athlon 2 or Phenom 2).
      2) Buy a cheap CPU (Sempron).
      3) Swap the IHS
      4) Sell the Sempron with the Phenom 2 IHS, as a Phenom 2.

    • @mvanderplas2275
      @mvanderplas2275 Год назад +11

      No you're not understanding him. He saying the scammer has a broken higher end cpu. They delid it to get the lid. Then they buy a cheap cpu from the same generation and swap the lid on the cheap cpu to sell it as if it is the high end one. This scam might also work with intel, but definately it has been done with ryzen. No pins will be bent on the cheap cpu so they can show you that easily.

  • @thomasgiles2876
    @thomasgiles2876 Год назад +16

    Love the Ditto cameo in the video about fakes.
    A good sign that your CPU is fake; instead of your CPUs eyes looking like this 👀 they look like this °°

  • @Jimster481
    @Jimster481 Год назад +83

    The tool you used in the video was to Identify Fake Intel CPUs (these are a thing entirely) as well as CPUs with BIOS that were modified (a problem in China where Celeron systems were being sold as i7 but appeared as i7 in windows). This is what the tool tests for.

    • @zodwraith5745
      @zodwraith5745 Год назад +6

      This is the first reply that mentions these are all from China. Maybe don't buy your hardware from China?

    • @makuru.42
      @makuru.42 Год назад

      @@zodwraith5745 nah, must have been the kids.
      But seriously, it's going to get a whole lot worse in china because of the sanctions.

    • @moth.monster
      @moth.monster Год назад +8

      @@zodwraith5745 it's all made in China my dude

    • @zodwraith5745
      @zodwraith5745 Год назад +4

      @@moth.monster Yeah but there's a difference in brand certified and quality controlled Made in China and random named BangHappyPowGood company Made in China.
      Even the "good" stuff that comes from the same factories using the tooling bought for official runs is done with substandard components and materials behind the company's back.

    • @austinh1028
      @austinh1028 Год назад +1

      @@zodwraith5745 Yea there are always two different production lines in China:
      -the one backed by big brands with quality control and high standards
      -then the knockoff ripoffs destined for alibaba and similar sites with no quality standards really at all, but they 'look like the real deal' so they know people will buy them even just to throw them away to go find the real one.
      Chinese knockoffs are all scams, you really have to do your research these days on sellers
      Though I find it interesting that the knockoffs all play by the rules when it comes to the actual branding, they do have a requirement that is cannot be exactly the same logo as the production brands

  • @christophermullins7163
    @christophermullins7163 Год назад +41

    GN just got scammed for $460 by a clever viewer.

    • @gearfriedtheswmas
      @gearfriedtheswmas Год назад +2

      More like we go scammed for watching.

    • @someguy9175
      @someguy9175 Год назад +15

      I mean, this video probably made them away more than $460 usd and the video is actually entertaining, so, even if it was a double agent scam(lmao) everyone won, i guess

    • @viscountalpha
      @viscountalpha Год назад +3

      But it enriches all of us. That's more valuable if it stops people from scamming.

  • @siliconalleyelectronics187
    @siliconalleyelectronics187 Год назад +26

    This type of scam has been around for a long time. Certain processors like AMD units are a lot easier as they are identical from the outside other than the markings. There are a lot of fake 5950x's and 9900k's out there.

    • @louistournas120
      @louistournas120 Год назад +8

      I guess most people forgot the Pentium era of 1997. The CPUs were never multiplier locked. You put the CPU on the motherboard and you setup jumpers to select which clock speed you want for the motherboard and what multiplier you want for the CPU.
      For example, for a 100 MHz Pentium, you set the motherboard at 66.6 MHz. You set the multiplier at 1.5x. The CPU would be at 100 MHz.
      Some people found out that their 100 MHz Pentium was locking up the entire system once in a while. They measured the thickness of the CPU and found that it was 0.x mm thinner than normal.
      This is bc someone machined the surface off. They laser engraved 100 MHz and the rest of the info on it.
      The material of the CPU was some kind of ceramic.

    • @adamwalter2573
      @adamwalter2573 Месяц назад

      @@louistournas120 Not laser graved CPU speed - the first Pentiums has even marked the speed with...a black pen, written manually speed on cpu :)

  • @KevinLikesRTS
    @KevinLikesRTS Год назад +88

    Thank you so much for showing this. I’m in the market for an upgrade and this is insane the world we live in :/

    • @SangheiliSpecOp
      @SangheiliSpecOp Год назад +3

      Yeah people out there really don't care about taking other's hard earned money

    • @johnandrews9433
      @johnandrews9433 Год назад +15

      Always been this way, buyer beware

    • @KevinLikesRTS
      @KevinLikesRTS Год назад +1

      @@johnandrews9433 just sucks that it’s even a thing. Could come “new in box” and the scammer just reseals it. People have no conscience.

    • @johnandrews9433
      @johnandrews9433 Год назад +2

      @@KevinLikesRTS it could but that’s pretty unlikely, even less likely than this. Same thing could happen if you buy anything “sealed” you could get a brick in a box.

    • @Youtube-Censorship-Police
      @Youtube-Censorship-Police Год назад +4

      if you measure the insanity of our planet with fake cpu's, then you live a pretty good life i'd say

  • @OGTribeq
    @OGTribeq Год назад +23

    Massive props for buying the CPU from the scammed person for what he payed for it.

  • @pliashmuldba
    @pliashmuldba Год назад +9

    I remember my old Northwood CPU, looking at the SMDs on the back of it, those actually matched a EE CPU and not the generic 3.2 GHZ northwood.
    It also OCed just fine on water. 😁

  • @dragontales1999
    @dragontales1999 Год назад +45

    One time I saw a Reddit post where a dude got a Ryzen Sempron instead of a 3700x

    • @volvo09
      @volvo09 Год назад +2

      Ooof

    • @ebridgewater
      @ebridgewater Год назад +17

      A 'Ryzen Sempron'? lol

    • @rlosangeleskings
      @rlosangeleskings Год назад

      I've seen a bunch of counterfeit AMD Ryzen 5 4000G series chips...enough that I will not buy them... The best chip of the 8 I tested was a Ryzen 5 3200G and the worse was a late model Athlon (I think it was a 6400) with Ryzen graphics... All were in builds people brought in...and the chips were at fault...

    • @hman6159
      @hman6159 Год назад

      Oof

    • @alexmills1329
      @alexmills1329 Год назад

      But did it fit in the motherboard

  • @josuad6890
    @josuad6890 Год назад +15

    Remember folks, if a deal looks too good to be true, then maybe it is too good to be true. Double that if you're on a marketplace, and don't have a buyer's protection.

    • @Tc4ify
      @Tc4ify Год назад

      @Mr Liquid Devil This was probably close to a year ago and yeah, 500 would have been just enough to entice someone, but not immediately suspect trickery (smart scammer).

  • @nathanderulo
    @nathanderulo Год назад +15

    Hey Gamers Nexus! Love your guys content and quality you put out. Out of curiosity is there any plans to make the pt2 of the, "What are ram timings?" You guys rock keep it up

    • @texasjapan4071
      @texasjapan4071 Год назад

      Bump this up

    • @maxxus0923
      @maxxus0923 Год назад

      bumping!

    • @ChrispyNut
      @ChrispyNut Год назад

      FWIW, Buildzoid / Actually Hardcore Overclocking has a mini series on memory timings. Covers a bunch, but being a lazy git, doesn't go especially far down the stack.
      E2A: Playlist link ruclips.net/p/PLpS0n7xxSadUJE1fEuWfEMGvmMsVYGAbA

    • @nathanderulo
      @nathanderulo Год назад +1

      @@ChrispyNut Oh sweet! Thanks for sharing that did not know he had that

  • @keokai808
    @keokai808 Год назад +9

    Thanks Steve, I love this type of reporting as it may save someone some grief. Like always, awesome job!

    • @802Garage
      @802Garage Год назад +1

      You can literally see it!

  • @pcsecuritychannel
    @pcsecuritychannel Год назад +16

    Gamers Nexus going around unscamming people, this is another level of badass.

    • @RiceCrustyTreat
      @RiceCrustyTreat Год назад +2

      He didn't seem all that excited about it though...

  • @AnCapGamer
    @AnCapGamer Год назад +6

    By making this video AND all the amazing support from the great community, you will have made your money back. Always love these in depth videos GN does. Thank you for bringing these scams to light!

    • @ryanleninfan1337
      @ryanleninfan1337 Год назад +1

      Why would an ancap care if someone was scammed lol

    • @AnCapGamer
      @AnCapGamer Год назад

      @Ryan Lenin fan ancaps dont scam people, it's bad for business!

    • @Xetarine
      @Xetarine Год назад +2

      @@ryanleninfan1337 And what forbids one from caring

    • @cacodemon_doom
      @cacodemon_doom Год назад +3

      @@ryanleninfan1337 Because he has morals maybe?

  • @AlexSchendel
    @AlexSchendel Год назад +18

    $500 sounds like a lot, but I guess in a world where police don't even bother helping people get back stolen cars worth thousands of dollars, I guess that's just how our incredible system works. In any case, great coverage, very interesting and scary to see what is happening in the used market there. Thanks for helping us find good ways to verify the products! Although, like a lot of people were saying, they could perform an IHS swap which could mean they could post a photo of the genuine 12900KS before swapping the IHS. And even if they don't swap the IHS, they could still edit any photos they post. Definitely always best to purchase from a place that has buyer's protection.

    • @tobiwonkanogy2975
      @tobiwonkanogy2975 Год назад

      idk IRS cares about any $500 amount being moved now, maybe they could pass along frauds to law enforcement.

    • @mapesdhs597
      @mapesdhs597 Год назад +1

      I'm in the UK; many years ago I and a dozen others got scammed on ebay by the same seller who was selling junk AthlonXP CPUs. It took months to obtain refunds back via ebay/PayPal (I coordinated action among all the affected buyers), even with the direct help of AMD. It was complicated because the scam was perpetrated by someone in the UK but also others in Italy, ebay PM replies could come from either source.
      Alas the cops told me they normally don't bother to investigate online fraud the amount lost is more than 5000 UKP, so of course scammers have a different MO to get round this, namely to do the same scam involving a much smaller amount but applied to a large number of people, so overall the scammers can make many thousands, even tens of thousands, but no individual person is hit for a sum that will attract the cops. Also, I was told that investigations are especially unlikely to be conducted if any international connections are involved, because it's then so much more complicated and expensive, for obvious reasons.
      Ebay is riddled with this sort of thing, and back then showed little interest in even trying to put a stop to it, despite being able to use basic analytics to easily identify likely scammer accounts. I kept reporting scams to ebay, mainly long form scams (where a seller builds up a +ve reputation over time via bogus sales, then uses that image to conduct the main fraud), but little happened, except perhaps a shift in policy where decisions now do err much more toward the buyer in general, though this now leaves sellers vulnerable to scams aswell.

  • @kajurn791
    @kajurn791 Год назад +7

    On most used CPU scams they ship CPUs from different sockets that would never fit in the socket or be able to be installed. This is a same socket CPU and at a glance it's much harder to tell. With this unless you know firsthand what to look for you'll only realize it once you've installed it onto the system and saw task manager or the bios.

  • @duckman12569
    @duckman12569 Год назад +1

    Good video to have your brand sponsoring...and I AM looking at getting a new case.

  • @Sochsun
    @Sochsun Год назад +10

    Atta Gamers Nexus
    Did more than you needed to, and helped someone who was injured by this.
    Utmost respect

  • @addanametocontinue
    @addanametocontinue Год назад +1

    Can't wrap my head around buying a $500 CPU off a craigslist ad. If you're going to buy something that expensive, you may as well pay a bit more to buy it from a reputable place.

  • @derelictmusic3218
    @derelictmusic3218 Год назад +4

    I think GN got scammed too, was there a link to the original ad? I don't believe anyone who would pay $500 for a used 12900KS with cash. The used cash market always has a *huge* discount to the online used market because of the possibility of scams and inability to return products.

    • @IRefuseToUseThisStupidFeature
      @IRefuseToUseThisStupidFeature Год назад

      Maybe this purchase was back when the 12900 was new.
      Also people do dumb S#!+ all the time. So 🤷‍♀️. Either way they showed it was possible to do and it was clearly done, whether to GN or the original person so the video is justified either way.

  • @OfSheikah
    @OfSheikah Год назад

    I really hope your coverage of this scam gets widespread quicker than these problematic scam potentials, really Gamers Nexus is keeping the market in check

  • @orozcocris93
    @orozcocris93 Год назад +3

    as someone who has lapped his 5950x, i can say it was a massive pain to get the dang thing taken off. lapping of course, requires you take all of the nickel off of the ihs however, the lettering was basically down to the copper

    • @Tc4ify
      @Tc4ify Год назад +1

      Yeah, apparently with AMD, this was only done by swapping IHSes.

  • @ThriftStoreHacker
    @ThriftStoreHacker Год назад

    Good on you for helping the fella who got scammed out. That can be devastating to a person without much build money.

  • @DuffCon
    @DuffCon Год назад +4

    Cool that Steve helped out! The best outcome really.

  • @regnittoekim46123
    @regnittoekim46123 Год назад +1

    I would have assumed an IHS swap....good information, Steve!

  • @TheHangarHobbit
    @TheHangarHobbit Год назад +4

    I'm shocked they aren't doing that scam with AMD as the Athlon 950 sells for $12 and the 5800x3D is selling for $330 and both are AM4.

    • @SeabooUsMultimedia
      @SeabooUsMultimedia Год назад +4

      Actually that did happen a few times on eBay those sellers though usually get kicked off the site

    • @BBWahoo
      @BBWahoo Год назад

      You're giving them ideas!!

  • @Jimsathome
    @Jimsathome Год назад +2

    Thanks for the interesting video. I just bought an Intel i7 12700K CPU and used your tip to see about warranty coverage using the serial # and Batch #. It's covered until February 12, 2026. Happy Days. 😉

  • @curbthepain
    @curbthepain Год назад +36

    Damn thermaltake stepping it up thats a sick case

    • @iamstd2
      @iamstd2 Год назад +14

      It's almost like they figured out that selling below average products for above average prices doesn't win customers

    • @sammiller6631
      @sammiller6631 Год назад +7

      @@iamstd2 Almost

    • @IRefuseToUseThisStupidFeature
      @IRefuseToUseThisStupidFeature Год назад +2

      I thought it got a poor review, but maybe that was a similar looking case...

  • @soapa4279
    @soapa4279 Год назад +10

    I feel almost privileged and blessed to not have to buy used PC parts. But I completely feel for the folks who do it to save a decent amount of money. It's just insane how elaborate scammers are now.

    • @ChrispyNut
      @ChrispyNut Год назад +4

      A pleasant surprise to see someone acknowledge those aspects. Thank you.

    • @Robbie-mw5uu
      @Robbie-mw5uu Год назад

      these scams are extremely rare
      unless you're willingly shopping for used parts on aliexpress, craigslist, etc, you won't get scammed
      Ebay protects it's buyers more than sellers. They will absolutely step in and destroy sellers who try to scam customers.
      Amazon is very laid back, but always check if the listing is fulfilled by amazon in which case amazon will supersede any authority from the seller and process returns automatically without the seller's input. Amazon warehouse are good used parts.

  • @marinob7433
    @marinob7433 Год назад

    That makes sense. You find some sellers selling 12400 13400 at very low prices claiming they are brand new but they don't have a receipt to show you and of course only on "tray" version

  • @dangermouse9494
    @dangermouse9494 Год назад +14

    Steve is the hero we all need. The man is a legend.

  • @Kisai_Yuki
    @Kisai_Yuki Год назад +1

    Look at the seller history when you buy from eBay. Counterfeiters will usually have a bunch of feedback farming (selling cheap things,) and then suddenly selling high priced items.

  • @NinjAsylum
    @NinjAsylum Год назад +7

    LTT did a story a few months ago about a similar swapped Ryzen CPU from Best Buy.

    • @BBWahoo
      @BBWahoo Год назад

      What was the fake processor?

  • @ShikifuyinYT
    @ShikifuyinYT Год назад +2

    Well ... Just got an i9-13900k from amazon ... turns out its an i7-13700k which has been IHS swapped !
    Going through the amazon return procedure right now ... wish me luck !

    • @Born_Stellar
      @Born_Stellar Год назад

      i'm seeing a large number of 13900k's on ebay with pads placement that looks like 13700k. there are so many i'm starting to doubt they were fakes.

  • @TheAzureJahk
    @TheAzureJahk Год назад +5

    Tha website is useful to know about. I was expecting the scam to be where they delidded and swapped real Intel IHS between different SKUs and pass off an i3 as an i9 etc. The website would catch a discrepency between the PCB code and IHS code from a photo. I didn't think about them fabricating the text on the IHS itself.

    • @pirojfmifhghek566
      @pirojfmifhghek566 Год назад +1

      No kidding. That's some seriously low-hanging fruit right there.

  • @genethebean7597
    @genethebean7597 Год назад +1

    IHS swapping has been a consistent problem for a while, but to see it happen in REAL LIFE, with REAL CASH MONEY exchanged, is something I was not expecting to see. It takes serious malfeasance to do something like that.

  • @Christopher_S
    @Christopher_S Год назад +3

    How did they print the lettering with such accuracy! Wow that's a lot of work, effort and time for a scam like that.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred Год назад +1

      They probably just swapped the IHS with another CPU. Then they kept the better CPU. It was an upgrade with cash back.

  • @Chris_In_Texas
    @Chris_In_Texas Год назад +1

    In this particular CPU, you can see the extreme wear marks on the hold down, but the printing is perfect, based on the amount of the wear on the hold down points there shouldn't be much left of the actual printing. Great job bringing this to light! 😁👍

  • @bluegizmo1983
    @bluegizmo1983 Год назад +25

    The sad thing is, a lot of these types of scams aren't even perpetrated by the seller! They are actually committed by buyers who buy legitimate products (like a real 12900K) and then swap the heat spreader and send it back for a refund, and the seller is non the wiser and ends up reselling it.

    • @shanez1215
      @shanez1215 Год назад +3

      That's only if the seller doesn't check. In games it will be VERY OBVIOUS

    • @michaelhanson5773
      @michaelhanson5773 Год назад

      Any smart seller would be checking things they got as a return though... They should be checking it that it still works and also it is what it says... They shouldnt be just turning around and selling it without verifications... The place i worked at used to validate every return and/or used item prior to resale.

    • @reignreincarnation5531
      @reignreincarnation5531 Год назад

      @@michaelhanson5773 they should but with the amount of returns and lack of manpower and low wagesc i don't think they have the time or motivation to inspect each and every returned item plus it's a cpu and it looks legit as hex. You wouldn't be able to tell it was a fake in even 100s of glances. You need to put it into motion, whole freaking cpu and detail check it. Ain't nobody got time for it unless the returns are not as much.

  • @AaronShenghao
    @AaronShenghao Год назад +2

    Police probably won't brother to investigate it until they have similar scams from the same area or the scam value went over 1000...

  • @ocha-time
    @ocha-time Год назад +5

    aw c'mon man, I just bought a CPU like two hours ago. Now I'm gonna have anxiety for a week until it comes in :p

    • @BBWahoo
      @BBWahoo Год назад

      What CPU was it?

    • @ocha-time
      @ocha-time Год назад

      @@BBWahoo 12400. Hopefully it’s not worth counterfeiting, I’m trading up from a 12100f so I can ditch my GPU for a few months while I catch up on bills

  • @jameslmorehead
    @jameslmorehead Год назад +1

    The new text can be applied just like you do when making a PCB at home. You print a mirror image on transfer film or overhead projector sheets using a laser printer. You then use heat from something like a cloth's iron to transfer the image to the final position.

  • @ImperatorSupreme
    @ImperatorSupreme Год назад +11

    One of the risks associated with buying used, especially if you can’t inspect prior to purchase.

  • @Nemesizzonline
    @Nemesizzonline Год назад

    On the second hand market it at times can be tricky (talking about websites like Ebay) to be sure if it's a real deal or not (though, if it sounds too good to be true it usualy is). However, you can also run into 'scam' parts from official retailers. Some bigger shops aren't too keen or thorough with their return policies (checking the returned parts), they simply grab the part, and put it back on sale with a slight discount and market as used. What they failed to do, is check the product itself if it's realy the part it is supposed to be. Back with the first Ryzen launch (AM4 socket, obviously with pins on the processor, and not in the socket like LGA), people would buy the more expensive Ryzen (1700x if I recall), and return the part, but keeping the Ryzen and put a Celeron (pinless LGA CPU) in the box. CPU goes back to the shop and instantly back on sale, and the next buyer gets a Celeron LGA cpu instead of the 2nd hand Ryzen they were expecting. And with that, the risk that the new buyer gets marked as a scammer while he/she is the one that got scammed.
    Fake GPU's are usualy a bit easier to spot (not all unfortunatly), but a lot of fake GTX 1060's (which were flashed Fermi 450 or 550 cards) were easy to spot because of the VGA (sub-d) connector. The real 1060's didn't have those anymore. Recently saw some fake Radeon RX 580's, which were actualy just RX550 or RX560 's, those were harder to spot from just looking at the card. But comparing the specs, you'd notice that they were fake (less shaders / cores etc), problem is, you usualy must have the card in your possession to check with GPU-z.

  • @PokèMyBalls
    @PokèMyBalls Год назад +9

    The last fake CPU I got was the 11700K. I never found out what it really was but it was 8th or 9th gen. The IHS was noticeably glued. I did the research and got a refund.

  • @sleepy_dobe
    @sleepy_dobe Год назад +1

    Kudos to GN for "un-scamming" the victim, and doing this video to educate the community.

  • @AWickedOne
    @AWickedOne Год назад +3

    I like how informative this was. I have never purchased a used cpu before, and it's good to know tricks to be wary of. Thanks!

  • @markkocsicska2590
    @markkocsicska2590 Год назад

    It's really cool of you guys to pay him the $500. If I was the guy I'd most likely be so infuriated that I'd try to get the thing to as many media outlets as possible out of spite to try to prevent the scammer from realising further gains.

  • @Dan-Simms
    @Dan-Simms Год назад +3

    Computer Jesus, doing gods work, what a legend!

  • @diconicabastion5790
    @diconicabastion5790 Год назад +1

    I generally use a method of meeting the person and getting video of them and a vehicle. Also inspect the product on hand. Don't let them put it back in the box if you choose to buy it. Put it in yourself. People can palm swap items easily enough. If you have footage of their car and them it is easy enough to track them down and drag them into small claims court and get an ruling against them. Even if they are think showing up in rental or a friends car there are still solutions to that you subpoena the information from the comply or the so called friend and if they fail to comply its contempt of court.
    I tend to take pleasure if getting back at these types. You can get awarded punitive damages plus court costs in cases also. The court could also turn them over to LE criminal investigation as well.
    At the least consult an attorney in your area it might well be worth it. A consultation can usually be gotten fairly cheap.

  • @hofas69
    @hofas69 Год назад +3

    Sad to see this kind of shit exists.

  • @Boogerdick69
    @Boogerdick69 Год назад +73

    The fact that he even thought it was a good idea to pay 500$ for a used 12900k is mind boggling lol

    • @BBWahoo
      @BBWahoo Год назад +8

      Ikr, could've bought a 13700k instead

    • @A1BASE
      @A1BASE Год назад +34

      You don’t know how long GN has been sitting on this video for or when the sale was made.
      There’s a good chance this was 6-8 months ago given that a police investigation has been completed.
      If it was bought 2nd hand shortly after launch it’s a 1/3rd saving which seems like it could be a good deal.

    • @Robbie-mw5uu
      @Robbie-mw5uu Год назад

      people who get scammed often are stupid enough to deserve to get scammed

    • @Boogerdick69
      @Boogerdick69 Год назад +3

      @@A1BASE 500$ for a 650$ cpu? Doesn’t matter when it launched lol

    • @Tc4ify
      @Tc4ify Год назад

      @@Boogerdick69 You couldn't get them for 650 for quite a while though...

  • @Maximum_Nova
    @Maximum_Nova Год назад +1

    I wonder how common the reverse type of scam is, where you buy a cheap item in cash, then buy a more expensive similar item on someplace like ebay, then lie and say you were scammed and got the cheaper item

  • @mgb2012
    @mgb2012 Год назад +3

    couldn't the scammer have delid'ed a celeron and a 12900ks and swap the heat spreader?

    • @hyperstimmed
      @hyperstimmed Год назад

      Doing that would create a pile of mislabeled 12900ks so unless they're keeping and using the CPU that would make no sense to do and lasering blank IHSs would be way cheaper

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred Год назад

      @@hyperstimmed of course they kept the better chip. They just got cash back on their upgrade.

  • @Kmmlc
    @Kmmlc Год назад

    This is why for CPU's I ask to go to the sellers house and it in either the bios or via hardware info before handing any cash over. If they aren't willing to do that, no sale.

  • @GD_MoonBlister
    @GD_MoonBlister Год назад +3

    There are some things in this world you should never buy used (unless from a close friend) and this is one of them. If you can't afford it, don't buy it. It's that simple.
    Thanks for sharing and stay well!

    • @Elkarlo77
      @Elkarlo77 Год назад +1

      CPU's are one thing you can buy used. Just don't OC them. I bought a lot of CPU's for older Boards but they were all in the 30-100 USD Range. Never had big problems with them. Aftermarket Cooler and you are fine. The Problems are ATM Highend CPU's they get scammed as there is the money. But getting for an 6 year old Board a nice CPU no Problem as long as you OC them to hard. They run literally for Decades, the Boards die first.

    • @Bpinator
      @Bpinator Год назад

      You can get huge discounts on older cpus though if its all you need.

  • @comrade171
    @comrade171 Год назад +1

    I won't be shocked when some of these start selling on amazon and good luck getting them to help

  • @wingman-1977
    @wingman-1977 Год назад +5

    Add this to the list of why I don’t buy pre-owned PC parts.

    • @BBWahoo
      @BBWahoo Год назад

      I got a Micron 9200 for around 800$~ 2 years ago, that was a hell of a deal, especially when 8tb NVME drives are still a rarity. You have to know where to look and who to buy from

    • @wingman-1977
      @wingman-1977 Год назад

      @@BBWahoo it’s still a crapshoot. I’m not a gambling man, so I’ll stick to buying new (only exception is when if you know the person).

  • @proesterchen
    @proesterchen Год назад +1

    Not sure I'd characterize Intel's IPDT as a tool to find fakes. It's more about checking if a CPU can complete all the specific function tests run.
    I'm also missing the use of Task Manager given it's built into every version of Windows and quite detailed in reporting which CPU is installed.

  • @pineapplepizza5733
    @pineapplepizza5733 Год назад +4

    I remember when Linus did a video on a fake ryzen 5 3600 but that was sold through best buy or newegg or something like that...

    • @Peter.H.A.Petersen
      @Peter.H.A.Petersen Год назад

      Yep ... From Best Buy!? 😆
      ruclips.net/video/D_Q_6V10mTU/видео.html

  • @CuteSkyler
    @CuteSkyler Год назад +1

    I recently got scammed for a 1000EUR GPU recently, it was quite a dumb mistake, not checking if the photos were legitimate/copied over from different listings, not asking for a photo with date and name, etc. At least I learnt from it but the worst part is that my police hasn't even started an investigation of any kind, so that sucks.

  • @ffwast
    @ffwast Год назад +4

    Avoid Intel scams, buy a different brand.

  • @Ale.K7
    @Ale.K7 Год назад +1

    I remember the era of painted ceramic Pentiums...
    There have also been fake CPUs, both AMD and Intel, where the non-soldered IHS had been replaced.

  • @Zero_XZ17
    @Zero_XZ17 Год назад

    Did you guys upgrade your cameras? Very clean video

  • @dnakatomiuk
    @dnakatomiuk Год назад

    This has been happening for years in the UK, where they delid and put it on a crap part.
    Its been happening in 2nd hand shops, why some have got small test benches set up on the back to test them for this sort of thing

  • @danielb5440
    @danielb5440 Год назад

    I just seen a fake ryzen processor on fb market place. Glad you pushed out a video about this.

  • @PokèMyBalls
    @PokèMyBalls Год назад +8

    This is exactly why I test parts and call it off if they don't let me.

    • @raics101
      @raics101 Год назад +1

      Yeah, it's customary here to go and buy the part in person, to check if it's working fine and if it's exactly as advertised. You might have it sent if you're dealing with a high reputation seller but otherwise it isn't recommended.

  • @milohajek
    @milohajek Год назад

    Yup, I got screwed on my i9-9900KS which got killed by a Orico NVMe clone dock which fried my NVMe boot drive and then shorted my Z390 Aorus Master board AND the Northbridge on my i9-9900KS and Intel COULDN'T WARRANTY it because the people that got scammed had gotten theirs warrantied so there where NO more i9-9900KS CPUs to cover my legitimate chip. INTEL even made me contact MicroCenter and have the manager email Intel my invoice as me scanning or taking a picture of the receipt and chip wasn't good enough for them because there have been so many scams.
    Thanks for doing this video Steve.
    It doesn't help me but im sure it will help others

  • @TennSeven
    @TennSeven Год назад +1

    12900KS CPUs are right around $500 brand new. Why would someone pay $500 for a used one?

  • @conza1989
    @conza1989 Год назад +2

    I asked Microsoft about buying a used Xbox as they're unavailable new retail, specifically I wanted to know about if the console was banned what could I do. They told me they don't support people doing this. This is left of field but I'll ask anyway.

  • @dustinreed1029
    @dustinreed1029 3 месяца назад

    That’s crazy I bought one from Best Buy brand new sealed in box. I7 13700k didn’t work. Eventually sent it to intel. They denied my warranty due marks being altered and modified.

  • @mzdshii9121
    @mzdshii9121 Год назад

    thank's for the info .. great work as always
    wish you all the best in the rest

  • @JulsGeekPI
    @JulsGeekPI Год назад

    Thanks I was not aware of this scam, Thanks for sharing the issue you have a new suscriber now

  • @AngelOfDeath420
    @AngelOfDeath420 Год назад +2

    You made me look over and grab my new 13900KS and make sure. Almost gave me a heart attack.

  • @Martial-Mat
    @Martial-Mat Год назад +1

    "First party retailer if it's new and boxed; don't don't worry about this. Try to return it."
    Have you forgotten the Newegg "new and boxed" motherboard scam so quickly?

  • @katherinesilens2994
    @katherinesilens2994 Год назад

    Important to note: buffing and relasering isn't the only way this is done. Sometimes they are delidded and new (or fake) IHSes are put on. It won't look shiny that way. This is more common with small-time scammers like you'll find in the used marketplace or on local listings, because the scammer can keep the high end CPU in a delidded (or relidded) configuration for themselves. They don't need lasering and any additional holographic devices on the IHS would be similarly defeated. It is also possible to get a fake IHS instead of using a real one. The best defense against this type of scam is asking for it to be plugged in, in person, and the second best is using the number checking as per 13:40.

  • @KevinRiggle
    @KevinRiggle Год назад

    It sounds like running the serial number through that warranty tool and checking against the substrate would be a great way to validate that you're receiving an authentic part, in an in-person exchange, without needing to take a whole test-bench to the coffee shop.

  • @whyjay9959
    @whyjay9959 Год назад +1

    Water-cooled Celeron. Certainly didn't thermal-throttle.
    There are a few Amazon reviews on a 9900KF complaining of fakes. One was also a dressed-up Celeron, others were some bare multi-die processor?? Not sure how they're organized though.

  • @realSchoepfer
    @realSchoepfer 2 месяца назад

    A friend of mine came to me, that I would help him with his fresh build. He bought an 14900KS and nothing worked. The ASUS-Mainboard that should be able to check if there is a problem with the cpu didn't even start the POST-Process. It made us believe, that the motherboard must be the problem. Even the ASUS Support headed in this direction. But it was the CPU... it looks exactly the same like the Celeron G6900 in your video from the bottom. The new variant of the scam might be simulating an defective mainboard. We had luck to have a second system to cross check.

  • @xredrum41x
    @xredrum41x 5 месяцев назад

    I just bought a 11900k a couple of months ago and wish I knew this before. I did my research and thank the heavens i did not get scammed 200 dollars. Thanks for doing topics like this.

  • @piernov
    @piernov Год назад

    GPU ICs themselves being counterfeit is sadly a thing too. As easy as slightly sanding the die and putting new markings on it. Most often it's done to make an old half-dead chip look like new with a recent datecode or a better revision, sometimes it's also making an engineering sample look like a retail product, or just a different part number.
    Unfortunately everything is being counterfeit these days. It's a real problem and especially affects the third-party repair industry where it's very difficult to source some genuine working parts.

  • @wizardofki
    @wizardofki Год назад

    Pretty much a public service announcement. Thanks for showing viewers how to avoid these. Like you said, Intel obviously doesn’t think it’s worth investing in improving their laser etching until this becomes a widespread problem. At least they provide those online tools and software suites to check for counterfeit products.

  • @NexGen-3D
    @NexGen-3D Год назад +1

    I personally would not purchase a high end component second hand, by the time people are selling these off, you will find they are heavily discounted in store anyway, I went through this with an I99900K it was like $50 more for new versus random one on eBay...

  • @mariastevens6406
    @mariastevens6406 Год назад

    Wow. I've seen cpu's that had the identifying label scrubbed off, but none with the identifier reprinted on it.

  • @POLARTTYRTM
    @POLARTTYRTM Год назад

    It is very nice of you to pay the guy 500 dollars back so he didn't lose all his money. I appreciate that, at least he's gonna have money to buy a real piece now and hopefully be alright not being scammed. It's rage-inducing knowing the scammer got away free and 500 bucks though.

  • @CNC295
    @CNC295 Год назад

    Yeah there's a problem with buying it from Amazon another retailer's as well. They buy the legitimate ship but send back the fake ship which then gets sold via their warehouse option.

  • @devonmoreau
    @devonmoreau Год назад

    That is really cool of you to buy that back from him at the cost he paid, that's alot of money for most people, appreciate you guys!

  • @jeffscomp
    @jeffscomp Год назад +1

    Nice of you to help the guy who lost money on it out.

  • @xpyr
    @xpyr Год назад

    I remember running this intel utility on my intel q6600 CPU, which is a quad core with no hyper threading, and it passed all tests except for the last one. I had it for 10 years though already, so not a big deal to me. It's long gone now though having been recycled, as I upgraded to a new system with an AMD 3900XT.
    One odd thing I remembered about it was my system would sometimes drop the multiplier from 9x to 8x once in a while and I'd need to go change it in the bios.

  • @rhaimon2100
    @rhaimon2100 Год назад +1

    😲😲THE SHELF OF UNUSED GPU'S!!!..... me and my 1080 ti are brimming with envy rn... I am currently trying to complete a budget build and was thinking of looking at second hand.. this makes me second guess that choice..

  • @dronner1
    @dronner1 Год назад

    Just watchin` this now but it is much more common than you may think and goes even more bold. I was also scammed and it was an AMD R7 5700X that I`ve bought from one of a big electronic shops! Bought it as an outlet cpu, marked as a ''class a'' category (meaning either it was a shop`s ''on display'' unit or other customer`s immediate return that was bought brand new. Turned out that the casing was original but the cpu underneth was an old FM2 cpu. My only conclusion was that the previous guy bought it, swapped cpus and returned it to the shop. That only proves that in most cases these big shops do not check their returns. I`ve also returned it and had no problems with it but it was only because when I got it, opened the pack and knew straight away what I`ve got, then returned it immediately hence they could not blame me for doing this. Imagine all other people with the same case who bought such cpu, didn`t opened it for a while or didn`t noticed anything till instalation atempt and was not granted a return option cause couldn`t prove that they did not tempered with the cpu!

  • @lvl89wrlk21
    @lvl89wrlk21 Год назад

    Pretty sure it is laser etching as you said. Fibre laser would be the quickest type and highest quality to produce. With a machine roughly worth 2-5k.
    It could also be done on a CO2 or possibly even a diode laser with a marking spray which can be had for around $500-1k dollars for the machine and $50ish for the spray which would be enough to produce hundreds of counterfeit chips. Might be more common on smaller operations.
    So not crazy investment by any means to pull off and well within the abilities of most laser hobbyists. Could definitely see this issue becoming more widespread.

  • @milohajek
    @milohajek Год назад

    That 2D matrix is on the Green edge of the substrate, like you mentioned and despite me confirming mine, they still made me jump through hoops just to end up telling me that they don't have any i9-9900KS OR i9-9900K chips to warranty it with

  • @Lazarosaliths
    @Lazarosaliths Год назад

    Great Video!!! Happy you helped that scammed guy(or did he scam you??? 😆😳🤯)