Serious accusations have emerged against the YouTube channel “TopedgeFX Reviews”, prompting multiple financial firms to report the operator to UK cybercrime units for digital extortion, online defamation, and blackmail attempts.
The channel, which operates under the Gmail address [email protected], has published low-quality “scam” videos falsely targeting reputable financial companies. With only one subscriber since its creation in 2015, TopedgeFX Reviews is now being described by industry experts as a digital hit-and-run operation designed to exploit online reputations for profit.
Companies Accuse Channel of Blackmail
Several regulated and unregulated financial services providers have come forward with concrete evidence that the channel’s owner has made direct contact after uploading damaging content—offering to “remove or revise” defamatory videos in exchange for monthly payments.
One company, speaking under legal confidentiality, confirmed:
“We received a threatening email just hours after the video went live. The individual demanded thousands per month to ‘keep our name clean.’ This is pure extortion and we have already filed a report with UK cybercrime investigators.”
Cyber Police and Digital Watchdogs Step In
Reports have now been submitted to the UK’s National Cyber Crime Unit (NCCU), which is part of the National Crime Agency (NCA). In response, a spokesperson from a London-based cybercrime watchdog stated:
“We are monitoring a growing number of cases involving fake scam reporting on YouTube, where the objective is to extort or destroy businesses. TopedgeFX Reviews fits this profile precisely and may be in breach of several UK cybercrime statutes.”
If proven, these actions could violate Section 2 of the UK’s Fraud Act 2006, as well as Communications Act provisions related to malicious communications and harassment.
Tactics Exposed: Fake Journalism for Sale
Investigations reveal a consistent pattern of behavior:
- A low-effort video accusing a company of fraud is uploaded to the TopedgeFX Reviews channel
- The owner immediately contacts the business offering “help” in exchange for money
- If the company refuses, the individual threatens to promote the video, sometimes using fake comments or paid Google Ads
Analysts also note that the videos lack any third-party verification, often relying on recycled clips, robotic narration, and misleading titles designed to create panic.
Online Business Community Fights Back
In a rare move, several fintech firms are joining forces to take civil and criminal action, with plans to launch a counter-offensive media campaign to expose fraudulent review operations online.
One executive stated:
“This individual tried to destroy our business for profit. We are done being silent. We’re pressing full legal charges, and we encourage others to do the same. The internet should not be a playground for cyber-blackmail.”
A detailed complaint has also been filed with YouTube’s Legal Removals team, citing repeated violations of platform policies on harmful and abusive content, targeted harassment, and impersonation of journalists.


