EDITORIAL TRANSPARENCY — XpressInfo Responds to ScamAdviser Automated Flag — All Evidence Presented Below
About XpressInfo

Is XpressInfo a Scam? Here Is the Full Truth About Who We Are

ScamAdviser's automated algorithm gave xpressinfu.com a low trust score. We welcome the scrutiny. Below we address every point raised, explain why each flag reflects automated misclassification rather than any harmful activity, and provide the proof that this is a legitimate, transparent news publication.

7 min read By Robert, Founder of XpressInfo
Our Verdict on the ScamAdviser Report XpressInfo is a legitimate, free news publication. It collects no money, sells no products and runs no financial scheme. Every concern ScamAdviser's algorithm raised is explained clearly below, with evidence. ScamAdviser's own report confirmed two positives: a valid SSL certificate and an independent DNSFilter rating of safe. We agree with those findings and invite every reader to verify our sources, our content and our identity for themselves.
2
ScamAdviser Positive Findings
0
Products Sold or Payments Collected
0
Financial Schemes Operated
10+
Trusted Sources Per Article
Safe
DNSFilter Independent Rating
Valid
SSL Certificate Status

What ScamAdviser Actually Said, and What It Means

We want to be transparent about this, so let us start by reading ScamAdviser's report honestly. ScamAdviser itself states on its own website that its trust score is generated by a computer program using 40 data points, and that the algorithm is not a human judgment. It also explicitly states that for a smaller or starting website, a low ranking can be considered normal. That is precisely what applies here. XpressInfo was registered on 25 February 2026 and launched days later. We are a new publication. Every publication on the internet was once a new website with a low traffic rank.

The three specific concerns ScamAdviser's algorithm flagged were: the site's young age, a low Tranco traffic rank, and the automated detection of cryptocurrency-related content. None of those three flags indicates dishonesty, a scam, harmful activity or deceptive practice of any kind. All three are characteristics shared by every new news website that covers financial markets, a category that includes Reuters, BBC Business, Al Jazeera Economy and thousands of other legitimate publications when they were new. You can read ScamAdviser's full automated report on xpressinfu.com here and judge its methodology for yourself.

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Addressing Every Flag ScamAdviser Raised

ScamAdviser Flag What It Actually Means for XpressInfo Verdict
Site is very young (registered Feb 2026) XpressInfo is a new publication launched in February 2026. ScamAdviser's own guidance states a low ranking is normal for a starting website. Every reputable publication was once new. Explained
Low Tranco traffic rank Tranco measures web traffic volume. New sites have low traffic by definition. This has no relationship to whether a site is honest or deceptive. Explained
Cryptocurrency services detected XpressInfo covers cryptocurrency and financial markets as news topics, exactly as Reuters, BBC and Al Jazeera do. Covering a topic in editorial journalism is not the same as operating a crypto exchange or investment scheme. There are no crypto wallets, exchanges or investment offers anywhere on this site. Explained
WHOIS data hidden WHOIS privacy is a standard feature provided by Hostinger, our domain registrar, and is used by millions of legitimate websites worldwide to protect owner personal data from spam and harassment. It does not indicate anonymity for deceptive purposes. Explained
Valid SSL certificate ScamAdviser confirmed this as a positive. Our SSL certificate ensures all reader data is encrypted between browser and server. Confirmed Safe
DNSFilter labels site as safe ScamAdviser confirmed this as a positive. DNSFilter is an independent internet safety service that assessed our domain and rated it safe to use. Confirmed Safe

What XpressInfo Is and What It Is Not

XpressInfo is a free, independent news and information website. It publishes articles covering global news events, financial markets, geopolitics, sports and general information. Every article is written using information gathered from trusted, named, verifiable sources. The site does not sell products. It does not collect payments. It does not solicit donations. It does not offer investment advice. It does not operate a cryptocurrency exchange, wallet, mining service or any other financial product. There is no checkout page, no subscription form, no payment processor and no request for any financial information from any reader at any point.

The site is owned and operated by Robert, who is identified by name on every article published on xpressinfu.com. The publication is hosted by IPFFM Internet Provider Frankfurt GmbH, registered through Hostinger, and uses Let's Encrypt SSL certification. These are standard, widely-used, entirely legitimate infrastructure providers used by hundreds of thousands of websites globally. There is nothing hidden, nothing concealed and nothing that requires any reader to part with money or personal financial details.

What ScamAdviser Itself Confirmed as Safe ScamAdviser's own automated report listed two clear positive findings about xpressinfu.com: a valid SSL certificate confirming encrypted data transmission, and a DNSFilter independent safety rating of safe. These are the assessments of the tools ScamAdviser itself relies on. We agree with both findings entirely.

Our Sources: Where Every Fact on This Site Comes From

The foundation of XpressInfo's credibility is the quality of its sources. We do not fabricate news. We do not publish unverified rumours. Every factual claim in every article is drawn from named, established, internationally recognised organisations. Below are the primary sources we use regularly, all of which are among the most trusted information providers in the world.

Reuters
The world's largest international news agency, founded 1851. Used as a primary wire source by every major global newsroom.
Al Jazeera
International news network based in Doha, Qatar. Widely regarded as a primary source for Middle East and global news coverage.
BBC News
British Broadcasting Corporation. One of the world's most trusted public broadcasters with over 40 million weekly international news readers.
US Department of Defense
Official statements, press briefings and releases from the Pentagon and US CENTCOM used for all military reporting.
International Monetary Fund
The IMF is cited for economic analysis, inflation assessments and global growth forecasts in our financial articles.
International Energy Agency
The IEA is the primary source for energy market data, strategic petroleum reserve information and oil supply analysis.
Rystad Energy
Independent energy research and business intelligence firm. Used for oil production analysis and supply disruption assessments.
Yardeni Research
Respected US financial research firm. Used for equity market analysis, Fed policy assessment and economic commentary.

Reuters is the primary wire service whose reporting underpins a significant proportion of the factual claims in XpressInfo articles. When XpressInfo reports that Reuters revealed 150 US troops were wounded in the Iran war, the reader can go directly to reuters.com and find the original exclusive report. That is precisely how editorial journalism is meant to work: a publication reads, synthesises and explains trusted primary reporting for its readers. That is all XpressInfo does.

Iran War Update: 150 US Soldiers Wounded in 10 Days

A Note on How ScamAdviser Works

We hold no animosity toward ScamAdviser. It performs a genuinely useful service in helping internet users identify dangerous websites, fraudulent shops and financial scams. Its tools help protect people from real harm and we respect that mission entirely. However, it is important for readers to understand that ScamAdviser's trust score for new websites is generated entirely by an automated algorithm, not by a human reviewer who has read the site's content, checked its articles or verified its sources. The algorithm cannot distinguish between a news website that covers cryptocurrency markets as a journalism topic and a website that operates a cryptocurrency scam. That is a known limitation of automated systems, and ScamAdviser's own FAQ acknowledges it.

The practical solution ScamAdviser itself recommends for website owners is to claim the site listing and submit it for manual verification. We are doing exactly that. In the meantime, we invite every reader who has a question about our credibility to do what ScamAdviser itself recommends: check the site out for themselves. Read our articles. Check the sources we cite. Visit the original Reuters, Al Jazeera and BBC reports we reference. That independent verification is the gold standard of journalistic credibility, and we are confident XpressInfo will pass it.

How to Verify XpressInfo Yourself Open any article on xpressinfu.com. Find a factual claim with a named source such as Reuters, the Pentagon or the IMF. Go to that source's website directly and search for the same information. You will find it. That is the entire test of whether a news publication is legitimate. Every claim on this site traces back to a named, verifiable, trusted primary source.
For a smaller or starting website, a low ranking can be considered normal. ScamAdviser's own automated report on xpressinfu.com, March 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

No. XpressInfo is a legitimate free news and information website owned and operated by Robert. It publishes news articles sourced from globally trusted outlets including Reuters, Al Jazeera, BBC and official government and military sources. It does not sell products, collect payments, ask for personal financial details or run any financial scheme. ScamAdviser's low trust score was generated by an automated algorithm that flagged the site purely because it was newly registered in February 2026, which is normal for any new publication.
ScamAdviser's own report explains that its score is generated by a computer algorithm and that a low score on a new site can be considered normal. The three factors that reduced the score were the site's young age (registered February 2026), low Tranco traffic rank (expected for any new publication), and the automated detection of cryptocurrency-related keywords in article content. XpressInfo covers cryptocurrency as a news topic, as do Reuters, BBC and every major financial publication. Covering a topic in the news is not the same as operating a cryptocurrency service.
XpressInfo sources its reporting from Reuters, Al Jazeera, BBC News, the Associated Press, official Pentagon and US CENTCOM statements, the International Monetary Fund, the International Energy Agency, Bruegel Institute, Rystad Energy, Kpler, Yardeni Research and Capital Economics, among others. All articles are written in editorial prose with source attributions clearly stated in the article text so readers can verify every claim independently.
No. XpressInfo does not sell any products, accept payments, solicit donations, offer investment advice or operate any financial scheme. There are no checkout pages, no payment processors, no subscription fees and no requests for financial details of any kind. The site is a free news publication. ScamAdviser itself confirmed the site has a valid SSL certificate and that DNSFilter, an independent internet safety service, labels xpressinfu.com as safe.
XpressInfo was registered in February 2026 and launched as a new independent news publication. Every reputable publication on the internet was once a new website. The age of a domain has no bearing on the legitimacy or honesty of the content published on it. ScamAdviser's own guidance explicitly states that for a smaller or starting website, a low ranking can be considered normal.
ScamAdviser's own report listed two positive findings: the site has a valid SSL certificate ensuring all data is encrypted between the reader's browser and the server, and DNSFilter independently labels the site as safe. The site also recorded a very fast website speed rating. All negative flags were automated algorithmic inferences based on site age and news topic coverage, not evidence of any harmful or deceptive activity.
Read any article on xpressinfu.com and check the sources cited in the text. Every claim is attributed to named organisations including Reuters, Al Jazeera, the Pentagon, CENTCOM, the IMF and others. You can independently verify those original sources by visiting them directly. DNSFilter, cited in ScamAdviser's own report, has already assessed xpressinfu.com and labelled it safe. The site has no payment pages, no login walls, no data collection forms and no financial offerings of any kind.

What Comes Next?

We have submitted xpressinfu.com to ScamAdviser's manual verification process, which allows a human reviewer rather than an automated algorithm to assess the site's content, sources and nature directly. As our readership grows and our Tranco traffic rank rises, the automated score will naturally improve as the algorithm receives more positive signals over time. We also welcome any reader who has a question about our credibility to contact us directly through the site.

Transparency is not just a policy for us. It is the foundation of everything we publish. Every article names its sources. Every claim is attributable. Every reader is free to check every fact we report against the primary sources we cite. That is the standard we hold ourselves to, and it is the standard by which we ask to be judged, not by an automated algorithm that cannot read our articles or understand that covering financial news is not the same as running a financial scam.

We thank every reader who took the time to investigate us before deciding whether to trust us. That careful, sceptical approach to online information is exactly the habit that protects people from genuine scams. We hope this article has given you what you need to make an informed decision about XpressInfo. We are confident the evidence speaks for itself.

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